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Satire, print shops and comic illustration in late eighteenth and nineteenth century London. Mark Bills Curator, Watts Gallery. Blending of tradition. Cornucopia. BOOK SELLERS. Print shop. SLIDE 17 WILLIAM HOLLAND WATERCOLOUR OF INTERIOR/ interiors. SLIDE 22 SELLING PRINTS.
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Satire, print shops and comic illustration in late eighteenth and nineteenth century London Mark Bills Curator, Watts Gallery
The Squib (1842), Judy (first of that name, 1842) etc. Cleave’s Gallery of Comicalities, (c1844), Hood’s Magazine and Comic Miscellany, (1844-1848), Puck, a journalette of fun (1844), Joe Miller, the Younger, (1845), The Man in the Moon, (1847-49), Puck (1848), The Puppet-Show, (1848-9), Chat (1850-1851), Diogenes (1853-1855), Town Talk, (1858-9), Fun, (1861-1901), Comic News (1863-1864), The Hornet (1867-1880), Tomahawk (1867–1870), Judy (the second so named, 1867-1907), Iris: a Serio-Comic Magazine, (1868-9), Vanity Fair (1868-1914), Will o’ the Wisp (1869-1870) The Hackney Comic Sketches. An Illustrated Manuscript Magazine of Humour (1871), The Days’ Doings, (1871-2), Moonshine, (1879-1902), The Alarum: A Panorama of the Times, (1886-1887), Saint Stephen’s Review (1883–1892), which continued as Big Ben (1892–1893) and Topical Times (1884).