English Caricature: The Golden Age of Satire | Custom Caricatures

Caricature:
The Weapon of Laughter!

A mini-encyclopedia to discover the art of satire

Overview: In the 18th and 19th centuries, England experienced a period of unparalleled press freedom that fostered a “Golden Age” of satire. As analyzed by Caricature.fr (our site), print masters like James Gillray, Thomas Rowlandson, and Isaac Cruikshank elevated caricature into a formidable weapon of social and political criticism.

Caricaturist Targets / Preferred Themes Graphic Style Historical Impact
James Gillray Politics, Napoleon, Royalty Ferocious, grotesque, colorful Father of modern political caricature
Thomas Rowlandson Customs, daily life, society Fluid, expressive, situational comedy Immortalized Georgian society
Isaac Cruikshank Social and political criticism Detailed, scathing, narrative Founded a dynasty of caricaturists

Why did England dominate the Golden Age of Caricature?

Bunbury, Henry William (1750-1811)

An amateur English caricaturist known for his humorous drawings of social life. In contrast to the ferocious style of his contemporary Gillray, his work is characterized by elegance and an absence of malice.

What was the impact of James Gillray and Thomas Rowlandson?

James Gillray (1756-1815) is the undisputed master of English caricature. With unprecedented violence and inventiveness, he made caricature a formidable political weapon, relentlessly attacking the French Revolution and Napoleon.

George Woodward (c.1760-1809) and Thomas Rowlandson (1757-1827) formed an iconic duo focused on social satire. Woodward provided the ideas, while Rowlandson visualized them with his energetic touch. Inspired by Gulliver’s Travels, they used the Lilliputian world of “dwarfs” to mock English society and depict human vanity as ridiculous.

Cruikshank, Isaac (1764-1811)

Father of the famous George, he was a prominent Scottish printmaker and caricaturist. His style followed in Gillray’s footsteps, blending biting political satire and humorous genre scenes.

Cruikshank, George (1792-1878)

Son of Isaac, illustrator and caricaturist, he became the leading satirist of his time, as Gillray’s successor. He is also famous for illustrating Charles Dickens’s novels. His vast body of work covers political satire, social criticism, and the campaign against alcoholism.

Doyle, John (1797-1868)

An Irish political caricaturist, known by the pen name “HB,” he introduced a more restrained, less grotesque new style. His lithographs looked like realistic portraits, requiring viewers to interpret the situation to understand the satire.

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