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Henry William Bunbury - Me & my wife and daughter. O terque quaterque beati.

Me & my wife and daughter. O terque quaterque beati.

Henry William Bunbury (English, 1750-1811)
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Why is this image in the public domain?
The Artist died in 1811 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.
Henry William Bunbury

Henry William Bunbury was an English caricaturist.

The second son of Sir William Bunbury, 5th Baronet (see Bunbury baronets), of Mildenhall, Suffolk, he came of an old Norman family. He was educated at Westminster School and St Catharine's College, Cambridge, and soon showed a talent for drawing, especially for humorous subjects. He temporarily left Cambridge to embark on a tour of Europe, during which time he may have studied in Rome; he returned to school in 1771 but is not known to have completed a degree. His European travels inspired a series of caricatures mocking foreigners, notably his La cuisine de la poste, exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1770.

His more serious efforts were no great success, but his caricatures are as famous as those of his contemporaries Thomas Rowlandson and James Gillray, good examples being his Country Club (1788), Barber's Shop (1803) and A Long Story (1782). He was a popular character, and the friend of most of the notabilities of his day, whom he never offended by attempting political satire; his easy circumstances and social position (he was colonel of the West Suffolk Militia, and was appointed equerry to the Duke of York and Albany in 1787) allowed him leisure to practise his talents.

The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography describes his A Long Minuet as Danced at Bath as the most successful of his lifetime, using an "innovative story-telling" format that is considered a forerunner to the comic strip. His caricatures were regularly reissued, even as he turned his attention to other subjects: he finished half of a commissioned set of 48 drawings of Shakespearean works before abandoning the series in 1796, and after the death of his wife and eldest son he took up oil painting.

In August 1771 he married Catherine, eldest daughter of Kane William Horneck and his wife Hannah Muggles. Bunbury and Catherine's second son Henry succeeded to the baronetcy.

In Collection: British Cartoons (View all 1227)

Storm and shipwreck

Storm and shipwreck

Thomas Rowlandson (English, 1756-1827)
The City Combat, or the Desperate Attack at The English Baron

The City Combat, or the Desperate Attack at The English Baron (1802)

Charles Williams (English, ?-1830)
Sports of a country fair. Part the third

Sports of a country fair. Part the third

Thomas Rowlandson (English, 1756-1827)
Triumph of love and folly.

Triumph of love and folly. (1812)

William Elmes (English, active 1811–1820)
A pair of spectacles easily seen thro’.

A pair of spectacles easily seen thro’. (1795)

Robert Dighton (English, 1751-1814)
Woodgatherers in a landscape

Woodgatherers in a landscape

Thomas Rowlandson (English, 1756-1827)
Is camomile a drug

Is camomile a drug (1824)

Richard Dighton (English, 1795-1880)
English barracks

English barracks (1788)

Thomas Rowlandson (English, 1756-1827)
Easter Monday. Or the Cockney hunt

Easter Monday. Or the Cockney hunt (1811)

Thomas Rowlandson (English, 1756-1827)
Date Obolium Belisario

Date Obolium Belisario (1782)

James Sayers (English, 1748 – 1823)
Miseries of high life; Briskly stooping to pick up a lady’s fan . . .

Miseries of high life; Briskly stooping to pick up a lady’s fan . . . (1808)

Thomas Rowlandson (English, 1756-1827)
The Corsican and his blood hounds at the window of the Thuilleries looking over Paris

The Corsican and his blood hounds at the window of the Thuilleries looking over Paris (1815)

Thomas Rowlandson (English, 1756-1827)
The female gambler’s prayer!!.

The female gambler’s prayer!!. (1801)

Thomas Rowlandson (English, 1756-1827)
Ague & fever

Ague & fever (1788)

Thomas Rowlandson (English, 1756-1827)
An Irish stew!.

An Irish stew!. (1830)

Charles Jameson Grant (English, active 1830–1852)
View all 1227 Artworks

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