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Image

Charles Samuel Keene

At Buxton, ca. 1878-1888

Description

Maker

  • Charles Samuel Keene, 1823-1891, British

Title

At Buxton

Year

ca. 1878-1888

Medium

Pen and ink and graphite on paper

Materials/Techniques

Materials

  • ink,
  • graphite

Supports

  • paper

Dimensions

13.2 x 19.5 cm (5 3/16 x 7 11/16 inches)

Signature / Inscription / Marks

Inscribed on mat:Charles Keene, John Singer Sargent R. A. CollectionLabel: At Buxton; Wm. Blades, from Sheffield (affably to noble lord with the hereditary gout); " 'Ope your lordship's better this morning.I can just manage to 'op about a bit.";Noble Lord(severely) "Aw - I was not aware that people of your class were subject to my complaint." (This Note by Sargent)

Type

  • Works on Paper,
  • Drawings and Watercolors

Credit

Gift of Mrs. Gustav Radeke

Object Number

20.472

Exhibition History

Exhibition History

Draw Me a Story

April 14 - July 23, 2006

Charles Keene was known as the “English Daumier” because of his masterly draftsmanship and focus upon social issues. His most significant contributions were to the periodical Punch, for which he executed around 3,000 drawings after 1851. His specialty was the “socials,” rather than political subjects as tackled by his contemporary John Tenniel. These consisted of recordings of small encounters of everyday life, mostly amongst the middle classes of English society. Keene’s lively but solid pen work was greatly admired by his contemporaries, but also challenging to wood engravers who sought to retain the freshness of his marks in reproduction.

This drawing is typical of Keene’s subject matter and technique, showing an elderly upper-class gentleman rebuffing the friendly advances of a well-meaning commoner, as evidenced in the caption “At Buxton; Wm. Blades, from Sheffield (affably to noble lord with the hereditary gout); 'Ope your lordship's better this morning. I can just manage to 'op about a bit.’; Noble Lord (severely) ‘Aw - I was not aware that people of your class were subject to my complaint.

Use

The images on this website can enable discovery and collaboration and support new scholarship, and we encourage their use. This object is in the public domain (CC0 1.0). This object is At Buxton with the accession number of 20.472. To request high-resolution files or new photography, please send an email to imagerequest@risd.edu and include your name and the object's accession number.

Feedback

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