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The Caricature Warehouse
The Caricature Warehouse
Knygos.lt klubas Knygos.lt nariams
65,86 €
-30%
Įprastai
94,09 €
  • Planuojame turėti už 152 d.
The London publisher, printer, and bookseller Thomas Tegg (1776–1845) has long been understood – and dismissed – as a hack purveyor of cheap prints and books. Christina Smylitopoulos argues that he was in fact a pivotal cultural agent whose bold interventions expanded access, opened new aesthetic possibilities, and helped fundamentally reshape British graphic satire in the early nineteenth-century print trade.Challenging Tegg’s reputation as a crass commercial opportunist, a series of case stud…

The Caricature Warehouse (el. knyga) (skaityta knyga) | knygos.lt

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The London publisher, printer, and bookseller Thomas Tegg (1776–1845) has long been understood – and dismissed – as a hack purveyor of cheap prints and books. Christina Smylitopoulos argues that he was in fact a pivotal cultural agent whose bold interventions expanded access, opened new aesthetic possibilities, and helped fundamentally reshape British graphic satire in the early nineteenth-century print trade.

Challenging Tegg’s reputation as a crass commercial opportunist, a series of case studies drawn from his publications examines the role of graphic satire in critical responses to the Napoleonic Wars and to Britain’s imperial projects in India. These analyses demonstrate how Tegg’s collaborations with leading artists – including Thomas Rowlandson, George M. Woodward, and George Cruikshank, as well as designers working under pseudonyms – fostered experimentation in form and meaning within a genre deeply entangled with the social, political, and aesthetic concerns of the period. Smylitopoulos situates Tegg within the dynamic publishing ecology of late Georgian Britain, revealing how his satirical prints and illustrated books engaged with pressing sociopolitical debates while challenging hierarchies of taste.

Bridging art, book, print, and cultural history, the book offers a fresh perspective on the intersections of commerce and creativity in the evolution of visual media. The Caricature Warehouse invites readers to reconsider the aesthetic significance of works long relegated to the margins, positioning Thomas Tegg as both a patron of modern art and an architect of emergent modernism.

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The London publisher, printer, and bookseller Thomas Tegg (1776–1845) has long been understood – and dismissed – as a hack purveyor of cheap prints and books. Christina Smylitopoulos argues that he was in fact a pivotal cultural agent whose bold interventions expanded access, opened new aesthetic possibilities, and helped fundamentally reshape British graphic satire in the early nineteenth-century print trade.

Challenging Tegg’s reputation as a crass commercial opportunist, a series of case studies drawn from his publications examines the role of graphic satire in critical responses to the Napoleonic Wars and to Britain’s imperial projects in India. These analyses demonstrate how Tegg’s collaborations with leading artists – including Thomas Rowlandson, George M. Woodward, and George Cruikshank, as well as designers working under pseudonyms – fostered experimentation in form and meaning within a genre deeply entangled with the social, political, and aesthetic concerns of the period. Smylitopoulos situates Tegg within the dynamic publishing ecology of late Georgian Britain, revealing how his satirical prints and illustrated books engaged with pressing sociopolitical debates while challenging hierarchies of taste.

Bridging art, book, print, and cultural history, the book offers a fresh perspective on the intersections of commerce and creativity in the evolution of visual media. The Caricature Warehouse invites readers to reconsider the aesthetic significance of works long relegated to the margins, positioning Thomas Tegg as both a patron of modern art and an architect of emergent modernism.

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