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- An MP and Suffragettes, 1908
An MP and Suffragettes, 1908
SKU:
1908p5
£17.99
£17.99
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Lewis Baumer (1870-1963)
Cartoon taken from a disbound copy of the Punch Almanack, 1908
In a cream conservation grade mount (matt)
In very good condition, as illustrated
Cartoon: 13 x 17.6 cm (visible); mount: 20.4 x 25.4 cm (8" x 10")
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Lewis Baumer RI PS (1870-1963)
Following art education at the St John’s Wood School of Art, the Royal Academy Schools and the Royal College of Art, Baumer began submitting cartoons to the Pall Mall Magazine in 1893. He contributed cartoons to Punch for fifty years from 1897. According to Price (1957), ‘[Baumer] was in a way the leader, and certainly the most popular, of the social commentators… His tennis-parties and tea dances and bright young things and crusty old men and carefully-reared children depicted one aspect of one movement in history as completely as [John] Leech depicted another… he was capable of real comic invention.’
In addition to his published work, Baumer was a member of the Royal Institute of Painters in Watercolours and the Pastel Society. He exhibited extensively including showing over two hundred works at the Fine Art Society.
Collections
National Portrait Gallery
Victoria and Albert Museum
Sources and further reading
Bryant M and Heneage S (1994), Dictionary of British Cartoonists and Caricaturists 1730-1980, Scolar Press
Dolman B (1981), A Dictionary of British Artists, 1929, Antique Collectors’ Club
Johnson J and Greutzner A (1999), British Artists 1880-1940, Antique Collectors’ Club
Mackenzie I, (1988), British Prints, Antique Collectors’ Club
Price R G G (1957), A History of Punch, Collins
Waters G M (1975), Dictionary of British Artists 1900-1950, Eastbourne Fine Art
Following art education at the St John’s Wood School of Art, the Royal Academy Schools and the Royal College of Art, Baumer began submitting cartoons to the Pall Mall Magazine in 1893. He contributed cartoons to Punch for fifty years from 1897. According to Price (1957), ‘[Baumer] was in a way the leader, and certainly the most popular, of the social commentators… His tennis-parties and tea dances and bright young things and crusty old men and carefully-reared children depicted one aspect of one movement in history as completely as [John] Leech depicted another… he was capable of real comic invention.’
In addition to his published work, Baumer was a member of the Royal Institute of Painters in Watercolours and the Pastel Society. He exhibited extensively including showing over two hundred works at the Fine Art Society.
Collections
National Portrait Gallery
Victoria and Albert Museum
Sources and further reading
Bryant M and Heneage S (1994), Dictionary of British Cartoonists and Caricaturists 1730-1980, Scolar Press
Dolman B (1981), A Dictionary of British Artists, 1929, Antique Collectors’ Club
Johnson J and Greutzner A (1999), British Artists 1880-1940, Antique Collectors’ Club
Mackenzie I, (1988), British Prints, Antique Collectors’ Club
Price R G G (1957), A History of Punch, Collins
Waters G M (1975), Dictionary of British Artists 1900-1950, Eastbourne Fine Art