Thomas Rowlandson (London 1756-1827)
Thomas Rowlandson (London 1756-1827)

Italian picture dealers humbugging my Lord Anglaise

Details
Thomas Rowlandson (London 1756-1827)
Italian picture dealers humbugging my Lord Anglaise
pencil, pen and ink and watercolour
11 ¾ x 9 3/8 in. (30.2 x 23.8 cm.)
Provenance
with Scott and Fowles, New York.
Literature
J. Grego, Rowlandson the Caricaturist, London, 1880, II., pp. 229-230.
Engraved
Etched by the artist, 30 May 1812, in reverse.

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Lottie Gammie
Lottie Gammie

Lot Essay

In this satirical scene, a young and handsome Englishman is introduced to a disreputable Italian art dealer by an obese Italian nobleman. Potentially on the Grand Tour, the Englishman is being shown a painting purportedly by Guido Reni depicting Mary Magdalene. Other framed paintings hang on the wall behind the three gentlemen. The gestures and demeanour of the two Italian men suggest that they are attempting to con or 'humbug' the English tourist. In 1812, the year that this engraving was published, Britain and France had been at war for two years and Englishmen were not permitted to visit Italy. This engraving, therefore, suggests a certain nostalgia for a time when Italy remained accessible for Grand Tourists. A similar engraving, formerly in the collection of George Francis Child Villiers, 9th Early of Jersey, is housed by Osterley Park, London.

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