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Richard Newton - Female gamblers in the pillory

Female gamblers in the pillory (1796)

Richard Newton (English, 1777 – 1798)
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License: All public domain files can be freely used for personal and commercial projects.
Why is this image in the public domain?
The Artist died in 1798 so this work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries where the copyright term is the Artist's life plus 70 years or fewer.

Richard Newton was an English caricaturist, miniaturist and book illustrator.

Born in London, Newton published his first caricature at thirteen. His work included caricatures expressing the English prejudice of the Scots as lean and hungry opportunists. He worked for radical publisher William Holland, producing anti-slavery works among his output, as well as "rude assaults" against Napoleon and the royal family. Newton minded Holland's shop when Holland was imprisoned for sedition during 1793–94. His watercolour (now in the British Museum) of fashionably dressed Londoners looking at prints in Holland's shop in Oxford Street, London, gives a depiction of an 18th-century print shop, and images of many of Holland's actual prints can be recognized on the walls. In 1794, Holland published an edition of Laurence Sterne's A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy with twelve plates by Newton.

Newton produced nearly 300 single sheet prints of which the British Museum's collection includes more than half. M. Dorothy George's "Catalogue of Political and Personal Satires Preserved in the Department of Prints and Drawings in the British Museum" lists 98 prints by Newton.

Newton died of typhus in London at the age of 21.

In Collection: British Cartoons (View all 1227)

Fast day

Fast day (1812)

Thomas Rowlandson (English, 1756-1827)
A Sunday evening.

A Sunday evening. (1772)

Henry William Bunbury (English, 1750-1811)
The Welch sailor’s mistake or tars in conversation

The Welch sailor’s mistake or tars in conversation (1808)

Thomas Rowlandson (English, 1756-1827)
A view of the parade at Bath.

A view of the parade at Bath. (1780)

Anonymous
The Danger Over or Billy’s Return to John Bull

The Danger Over or Billy’s Return to John Bull (1798)

Charles Ansell (English, active 1752–1790)
The same to you sir, & many of ’em

The same to you sir, & many of ’em (1820)

George Hunt (English, active 1824-1831)
College pranks, or Crabbed Fellow’s taught to caper on the slack rope

College pranks, or Crabbed Fellow’s taught to caper on the slack rope

Thomas Rowlandson (English, 1756-1827)
St. Giles’s courtship

St. Giles’s courtship (1799)

Thomas Rowlandson (English, 1756-1827)
Ireland in Scotland, or a trip from Oxford to the land of cakes.

Ireland in Scotland, or a trip from Oxford to the land of cakes. (1807)

Robert Dighton (English, 1751-1814)
The Prince of Peace Signing the Portugal Treaty

The Prince of Peace Signing the Portugal Treaty (1801)

Charles Williams (English, ?-1830)
Laugh & grow fat

Laugh & grow fat (1778)

William Austin
Easter Monday. Or the Cockney hunt

Easter Monday. Or the Cockney hunt (1811)

Thomas Rowlandson (English, 1756-1827)
Irish jaunting carr

Irish jaunting carr (1814)

Thomas Rowlandson (English, 1756-1827)
Tit for tat

Tit for tat (1827-1829)

William Heath (English, 1794-1840)
The sailor and banker, or The firm in danger

The sailor and banker, or The firm in danger (1799)

Thomas Rowlandson (English, 1756-1827)
View all 1227 Artworks

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License: All public domain files can be freely used for personal and commercial projects. .
Why is this image in the public domain?
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