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@Prints_on_Pots @Pitt_Rivers And here's what happens next! Print by George Cruikshank, 1819, see https://t.co/FaGjnV5C8J
@HogarthProgress James Gillray followed Hogarth with Prime Minister Pitt as the Devil, Queen Charlotte as Sin and Lord Chancellor Thurlow as Satan. Dorothy George said the "outrageous representation of the Queen, is said to have given great offence at Court", see https://t.co/NlnfTlbg0x.
@TheEphemerist Here she is with daughter Princess Beatrice advertising Borax. Part of the collection of 'Victoriana' @britishmuseum, see https://t.co/T48y9Vs5zS
@artisthogarth You can find Hogarth's original print of Wilkes (and many others) at https://t.co/PMYG8mxfgA. Spot the differences!
@Prints_on_Pots @britishmuseum And here's another pair - French print-Chinese dish. See, https://t.co/izYOn4J1OW and https://t.co/bCqtX037SZ
@GeorgianLords Here's John S Copley's painting of the shark attack and here is Watson later in life minus leg.
@GeorgianLords But John Wilkes who wrote the North Briton got away with it thanks to parliamentary privilege.
@artisthogarth Spot differences between Hogarth's print of Wilkes (below) and 19th-century copy (above). Bad copies harm Hogarth's reputation as an artist.
@artisthogarth Here is Hogarth's print of John Wilkes, for information about it, see https://t.co/pZpZhDnQDU