Landseer, Thomas (1795 London 1880). Lady spruced up excessively with pompadour, frill, curls, and a hat dressed with flowers like a field’s edge. Her pug under the raised skirt yapping against the impudent street-urchin with dustpan + brush over his back. The persons as humanly dressed monkeys, the dog in natural appearance. Etching. (1827/28.) Inscribed: Thomas Landseer invent / Proof, otherwise as below. 20.4 x 16.7 cm.
Rümann, Das Illustrierte Buch des 19. Jhdts., Leipsic 1930, pp. 99 ff.; Nagler 1; Thieme-Becker XXII, 305. – On especially wide-margined buff paper. – The wide white margin quite feebly foxing, only the outside parts of particularly upper and right lateral margin somewhat more.
Fine proof on large paper
with lines from Pope’s second Epistle to a Lady:

“ A fool to pleasure yet a slave to fame, Say what can cause such impotence of mind?
A spark to fickle or a spouse to kind, Wise wretch with pleasures too refined to please,
With too much spirit to be e’er at ease! ”
From the famous set of the “Monkeyana” , one of the only few early and thus typical works by Landseer :
“ That Thomas Landseer could be judged only by these illustrations a little book with woodcuts proves which show next to nothing of his intellect ” .
Worked since 1827 the 25 etchings incl. title were published in numbers and with classical sub-texts till 1828 in three editions: standard edition in quarto, edition on larger paper in large quarto, edition with proofs in large quarto, too. Besides copies on mounted China.
Otherwise qualified by Rümann i. a.:
“ Much more important was Edwin’s brother Thomas Landseer …
… in the 20s he distinguished himself by a series of 25 plates that were published 1828 under the title of ‘Monkeyana’ (ills. 57).
Technically his etchings are masterly ,
no less admirable the intellectual grasp of the theme. With much humor and sharp observation he transfers the plain life of his time to the monkey’s life. His sarcasm is biting, almost vicious. ”
In regard of the latter judgement Landseer’s contemporary Nagler, Monogramists V, 686, might be more to the point:
“ … the habits , costumes , and foolishnesses of his time
(Landseer has) caricatured delectably ” .
And Stechow sovereignly sums up :
“ Monkeys always fascinated artists ”
(Pieter Bruegel, Cologne 1977, page 76).
“ The monkey as the animal most similar to man plays an important rôle in art history since antiquity.
As figura diaboli ,
as symbol of sin and the fall of man ,
as fool , as figure of vanity
he appears in most varied context … (A)lso the usual religious reference in the interpretation of the monkey as
man mixed up in his passion for profane things … ”
(Hella Robels, Frans Snyders, Munich 1989, page 43).
Later Thomas Landseer devoted himself largely to the reproduction of the animal depictions by his brother Sir Edwin.
Offer no. 14,378 / EUR 189. (c. US$ 265.) + shipping
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