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Introduction
James Gillray (1756-1815) was the leading caricaturist of his time,
an artist of outstanding inventiveness who continues to influence
satirists today.
Satire has often been seen as the disposable art of an urban, commercialised
culture, one of the plethora of consumer goods which are continually
outdated and replaced by new offerings. Graphic satire usually deals
with fleeting events, so that its value as art, whether of the cartoons
in our daily papers or 18th century caricatures, appears to last
no longer than the topicality of its subject matter. This exhibition
investigates the tensions between this view of satirical prints,
and the prolonged and enjoyable examination which is invited by
Gillray's work, through his use of ambitious and complex printmaking
techniques, and the depth and range of his references. Gillray's
prints, from the time they were first produced, belonged both to
the street and to the connoisseur's study. They retain an ambivalent
status today, hung in a kind of limbo between political history
and art history. This exhibition sets out to re-examine Gillray's
art, through a selection of the finest impressions of his caricatures,
almost all of which are examples of the hand-colouring applied at
the time they
were produced, alongside a selection of the sketches and preparatory
drawings which show the obsessive care with which he developed not
only the images but also the vitally important written texts which
accompany them.
The exhibition is arranged in broadly chronological order. The
first room introduces Gillray's work through his enduring influence
on modern British satire. Examples of the work of the great, present-day
graphic satirists, including Steve Bell, Martin Rowson and Gerald
Scarfe, are shown alongside their comments about the ways in which
Gillray's art has affected their work.
List of works by contemporary cartoonists
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