The dance of death: the undertaker and the physician. Coloured aquatint after T. Rowlandson, 1816.

  • Rowlandson, Thomas, 1756-1827.
Date:
1816
Reference:
31924i
Part of:
English dance of death, from the designs of Thomas Rowlandson, with metrical illustrations, by the author of "Dr Syntax".
  • Pictures
  • Online

Selected images from this work

View 1 image

About this work

Description

In the town square of an English town, a physician rides on his horse with Death as a skeleton riding behind him. Left, a man and a woman carrying coffins, the man carrying an adult's coffin and the woman carrying a child's coffin

Publication/Creation

[Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified]

Physical description

1 print : aquatint, with watercolour ; image 12.3 x 21.1 cm

Lettering

The doctor's sick'ning toil to close, "Recipe coffin," is the dose.

Creator/production credits

In 1814 the humorous artist Thomas Rowlandson started to create a distinctive "English Dance of death": Rowlandson produced watercolours of contemporary scenes showing death, and William Combe (a writer) wrote verses describing the scenes. In addition to Combe's verses, each aquatint is accompanied by a couplet in English verse by an unidentified author, and the aquatints were coloured in watercolour by unkown hands. The combined pictures and texts were published by Rudolph Ackermann from his shop in the Strand, London, at a rate of three prints a month from 1 April 1814 to 1 March 1816

References note

R.R. Wark, Rowlandson's drawings for the English dance of death, San Marino, California 1966, pp. 3-27
J.R. Abbey, Life in England in aquatint and lithography 1770-1860, San Francisco 1991, no. 263.

Reference

Wellcome Collection 31924i

Type/Technique

Languages

Where to find it

  • LocationStatusAccess
    Closed stores

Permanent link