
Thomas Rowlandson
Cultural Positioning
- • Romanticism
Selected Institutional Exhibitions
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Thomas Rowlandson was a British printmaker and draftsman renowned for satirical aquatints and pen-and-wash drawings that lampooned 18th-century society, politics, and morality with biting wit and exuberant linework. Active from the 1780s until his death, he produced thousands of prints distributed through London publishers, establishing the visual vocabulary of Regency-era caricature. His compositions combined precise observation of human behavior with grotesque distortion, rendering aristocrats, merchants, and street figures in scenarios of absurdity and vice. Rowlandson's rapid, expressive technique and gift for narrative sequence made him a foundational figure in the development of sequential satirical imagery.
Source: Wikidata · Trust score: 40% · Updated 7d ago























