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Lovegrove
[The monkey who had seen the world] / Lovegrove sculp.
Published
[London] : [publisher not identified], [1790s?]
etching and engraving
image: 80 x 94 mm; plate mark: 280 x 179 mm; sheet: 293 x 193 mm
Peel 1703
Notes
Evidently based on an illustration by John Wootton for John Gay's fable of "The monkey who had seen the world"; the design being reversed and the figure of Thomas Paine taking the place of the "worldly" ape of the story.
See: George, Catalogue of political and personal satires preserved in the Department of Prints and Drawings in the British Museum, no. 8295, for a similar treatment of the same subject.
At bottom right: V1.P 63.
Plate evidently intended as an illustration for an unidentified publication.
See: George, Catalogue of political and personal satires preserved in the Department of Prints and Drawings in the British Museum, no. 8295, for a similar treatment of the same subject.
At bottom right: V1.P 63.
Plate evidently intended as an illustration for an unidentified publication.
Inscriptions/Markings
Inscribed in pencil above image: The monkey who had seen the world; below image: Tom Pain Republican Infidel.
Provenance
Formerly owned by Sir Robert Peel.
Summary
Print shows Thomas Paine standing in a forest, facing right, surrounded by a group of five monkeys who smile and laugh, as he reads to them from a copy of his Rights of man; a large tree trunk stands behind him and a monkey sitting on the ground behind him at left reaches out to pull the long queue of his wig.
Associated names
Wootton, John, approximately 1682-1764, After.
Peel, Robert, 1788-1850, former owner.
Peel, Robert, 1788-1850, former owner.
Classification
Department
Catalog link