Online Encyclopedia

GEORGE CRUIKSHANK (1792–1878)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 524 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GEORGE CRUIKSHANK (1792–1878)  ,
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English artist, caricaturist and illustrator, was born in
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London on the 27th of September 1792 . By natural disposition and collateral circumstances he may be accepted as the type of the born humoristic artist predestined for this
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special form of
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art . His grandfather had taken up the arts, and his
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father, Isaac Cruikshank, followed the painter's profession . Amidst these surroundings the children were born and brought up, their first playthings the materials of the arts their father practised . George followed the
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family traditions with amazing facility, easily surpassing his compeers as an etcher . When the father died, about 1811, George, still in his teens, was already a successful and popular artist . All his acquisitions were native gifts, and of home-growth; outside training, or the serious apprenticeship to art, were dispensed with, under the necessity of working for immediate profit . This lack of
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academic training the artist at times found cause to regret, and at some intervals he made exertions to cultivate the knowledge obtainable by studying from the antique and
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drawing from
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life at the
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schools . From boyhood he was accustomed to turn his
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artistic talents to ready account, disposing of designs and etchings to the printsellers, and helping his father in forwarding his plates . Before he was twenty his spirited style and talent had secured popular recognition; the contemporary of Gillray, Rowlandson, Alken, Heath, Dighton, and the established caricaturists of that generation, he
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developed
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great proficiency as an etcher . Gillray's matured and trained skill had some influence upon his executive powers, and when the older caricaturist passed away in 1815, George Cruikshank had already taken his place as a satirist . Prolific and dexterous beyond his competitors, for a generation he delineated Tories, Whigs and Radicals with
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fine impartiality .

Satirical

capital came to him from every public event,—wars abroad, the enemies of England (for he was always fervidly patriotic), the camp, the court, the senate, the Church; low life, high life; the humours of the
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people, the follies of the great . In this wonderful gallery the student may grasp the popular side of most questions which for the time being engaged public attention . George Cruikshank's technical and manipulative skill as an etcher was such that Ruskin and the best judges have placed his productions in the foremost rank; in this respect his
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works have been compared favourably with the masterpieces of etching . He died at 263
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Hampstead Road on the 1st of
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February 1878 . His remains rest in St Paul's
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cathedral . A vast number of Cruikshank's spirited cartoons were published as
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separate caricatures, all coloured by hand; others formed series, or were contributed to satirical magazines, the Satirist,
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Town Talk, The Scourge (1811–1816) and the like ephemeral publications . In conjunction with William Hone's scathing tracts, G . Cruikshank produced
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political satires to illustrate the series of facetiae and miscellanies, like The Political House that
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Jack Built (1819) . Of a more genially humoristic order are his well-known
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book illustrations, now so deservedly esteemed for their inimitable fun and frolic, among other qualities, such as the weird and terrible, in which he excelled . Early in this series came The Humorist (1819–1821) and Life in Paris (1822) . The well-known series of Life in London, conjointly produced by the brothers I . R. and G .

Cruikshank, has enjoyed a prolonged reputation, and is still sought after by collectors .

Grimm's Collection of German Popular Stories (1824–1826), in two series, with 22 inimitable etchings, are in themselves sufficient to account for G . Cruikshank's reputation . To the first fourteen volumes (1837–1843) of Bentley's
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Miscellany Cruikshank contributed 126 of his best plates, etched on steel, including the famous illustrations to Oliver Twist, Jack Sheppard, Guy Fawkes and The Ingoldsby Legends . For W . Harrison Ainsworth, Cruikshank illustrated Rookwood (1836) and The Tower of London (184o); the first six volumes of Ainsworth's
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Magazine (1842–1844) were illustrated by him with several of his finest suites of etchings . For C . Lever's Arthur O'Leary he supplied 10 full-page etchings (1844), and 20 spirited graphic etchings for Maxwell's lurid
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History of the Irish
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Rebellion in 1798 (1845) . Of his own speculations, mention must be made of George Cruikshank's Omnibus (1841) and George Cruikshank's Table Book (1845), as well as his Comic Almanack (1835–1853) . The Life of
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Sir John Falstaff contained 20 full-page etchings (1857–1858) . These are a few leading items amongst the thousands of illustrations emanating from that fertile
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imagination . As an enthusiastic teetotal advocate, G .

Cruikshank produced a

long series of pictures and illustrations, pictorial
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pamphlets and tracts; the best known of these are The Bottle, 8 plates (1847), with its sequel, The Drunkard's Children, 8 plates (1848), with the ambitious
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work, The Worship of Bacchus, published by subscription after the artist's oil
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painting, now in the
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National Gallery, London, to which it was presented by his numerous admirers . See Cruikshank's
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Water-Colours, with introduction by Joseph Grego (London, 1903) . (J .

End of Article: GEORGE CRUIKSHANK (1792–1878)
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