Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Thomas Rowlandson's Vauxhall Gardens: The Lives of a Print

View through CrossRef
While there have been many reception studies of verbal texts, it is only recently that we have begun to explore the historical and cultural contexts of interpretations of eighteenth-century visual print culture. Given that Thomas Rowlandson's 1784 watercolor Vauxhall Gardens has become the definitive image of that famous pleasure garden, and has given rise to many complex and contradictory readings, a reception history of this beguiling print is long overdue. Tracing the print's reception from Henry Angelo, an old, school friend of Rowlandson's, through David Coke and Alan Borg's 2011 sumptuous cultural history of the gardens, this article concludes with a closer look at a version of the print that has only recently come to light. Part of the Paul Mellon Collection housed at the Yale Center for British Art, this image, perhaps a trial version, contains a surprising figure that is absent from the more familiar watercolor. At center left, just behind the figures that have often been identified as the Duchess of Devonshire and Lady Duncannon, stands a man who appears to be holding a drawing pad with which to capture the likeness of the viewer who stands before him, or, better yet, the likeness of the artist who faces the crowd and sketches the scene captured in Vauxhall Gardens, in other words, Rowlandson himself. An endless of hall of mirrors in which we can gaze at ourselves gazing at others gazing at us, Rowlandson's Vauxhall Gardens is indeed a print with many lives.
Duke University Press
Title: Thomas Rowlandson's Vauxhall Gardens: The Lives of a Print
Description:
While there have been many reception studies of verbal texts, it is only recently that we have begun to explore the historical and cultural contexts of interpretations of eighteenth-century visual print culture.
Given that Thomas Rowlandson's 1784 watercolor Vauxhall Gardens has become the definitive image of that famous pleasure garden, and has given rise to many complex and contradictory readings, a reception history of this beguiling print is long overdue.
Tracing the print's reception from Henry Angelo, an old, school friend of Rowlandson's, through David Coke and Alan Borg's 2011 sumptuous cultural history of the gardens, this article concludes with a closer look at a version of the print that has only recently come to light.
Part of the Paul Mellon Collection housed at the Yale Center for British Art, this image, perhaps a trial version, contains a surprising figure that is absent from the more familiar watercolor.
At center left, just behind the figures that have often been identified as the Duchess of Devonshire and Lady Duncannon, stands a man who appears to be holding a drawing pad with which to capture the likeness of the viewer who stands before him, or, better yet, the likeness of the artist who faces the crowd and sketches the scene captured in Vauxhall Gardens, in other words, Rowlandson himself.
An endless of hall of mirrors in which we can gaze at ourselves gazing at others gazing at us, Rowlandson's Vauxhall Gardens is indeed a print with many lives.

Related Results

Black Lives, Black Words: Transnational Solidarity and Collective Artistic Activism
Black Lives, Black Words: Transnational Solidarity and Collective Artistic Activism
In 2015, playwright Reginald Edmund started the Black Lives, Black Words international project in Chicago with a series of performances responding to the Black Lives Matter movemen...
The Sunken Gardens of the Peruvian Coast
The Sunken Gardens of the Peruvian Coast
AbstractSunken gardens are a response to a situation in which ground water is near the surface of a desert but does not reach it. Since the 19th century this situation has generall...
Between the land- and cityscape. The idea and practice of a garden in the baroque urban space
Between the land- and cityscape. The idea and practice of a garden in the baroque urban space
The text is devoted to the place of gardens in a baroque city-(town)scape, links between urban planning and designing of residences, mainly on examples from Poland. The fascinating...
Gardens as Architectural Heritage of the Bastion Castle Ensemble
Gardens as Architectural Heritage of the Bastion Castle Ensemble
Historic gardens are often seen in the context of botanical heritage, which emphasizes their aesthetic and botanical value. Yet, their architectural importance as an integral part ...
Vauxhall on the boulevard: pleasure gardens in London and Paris, 1764–1784
Vauxhall on the boulevard: pleasure gardens in London and Paris, 1764–1784
ABSTRACT:Open to both aristocracy and middling rank, pleasure gardens fashioned a spectacle of order out of a heterogeneous crowd. They have been seen as uniquely British spaces, d...
Chinese pavilions in the early landscape gardens of Europe
Chinese pavilions in the early landscape gardens of Europe
The image of China perceived by the Europeans in the 17th to 18th century was based on the travelogues of the travellers and missionaries. Despite the fact that the first descripti...
Bureaucratizing Black Lives Matter murals: Racial capitalism, policing and erasure of radical politics
Bureaucratizing Black Lives Matter murals: Racial capitalism, policing and erasure of radical politics
In the wake of George Floyd’s murder during the summer of 2020, protestors painted large ‘BLACK LIVES MATTER’ murals on streets of the United States, forcing politicians to confron...
“Not walled facts, their essence”: Derek Walcott’s Tiepolo’s Hound and Camille Pissarro
“Not walled facts, their essence”: Derek Walcott’s Tiepolo’s Hound and Camille Pissarro
Life writing — a genre which goes beyond traditional biography, includes both fact and fiction, and is concerned with either entire lives or days-in-the-lives of individuals, commu...

Back to Top