Unfeelingness

Method Etching with hand colouring
Artist Daniel Thomas Egerton
Published London, Published by Thomas McLean, Repository of Wit & Humour, 26 Haymarket, 1823
Dimensions Image 134 x 196 mm, Plate 194 x 232 mm, Sheet 257 x 364 mm
Notes Inscription underneath image: 'If you are not bless'd with an Amiable wife, on whom to wreak your vengeance, you can make a pair of Dumb bells of your Protege and your Dog; the more inoffensive the victim of your unmerited attack, the more satisfying to revenge.'

From Daniel Thomas Egerton's 'The Necessary Qualifications of a Man of Fashion' which was published in 1823 by Thomas McLean.

Daniel Thomas Egerton (1797–1842) was a British artist, who was mostly known for his landscape paintings and satirical prints. He was one of the founding members of the Society of British Artists, and exhibited with them in 1824, 1829, 1838 and 1840. He travelled to Mexico several times and gained more fame towards the end of his life from his Views of Mexico, a set of hand coloured lithographs published c. 1840. A year later he would leave his family of a wife and two sons, to move to Mexico with nineteen year old Alice Edwards, the daughter of a befriended British artist. Egerton and Alice were found murdered in the streets of Tacubaya (Mexico City) in April of 1842. The murder was never resolved, as the couple was carrying cash and wearing expensive jewellery, which were strangely left untouched, and Alice was eight months pregnant at the time.

Condition: Strong impression with full margins. Binding holes to left side of the sheet, not affecting image.
Framing unmounted
Price £120.00
Stock ID 43780

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