Northcote’s striking print of the tiger
Tyger.
London,
John & Josiah Boydell, Cheapside, & at the Shakespeare Gallery Pall Mall,
May 1, 1790.
Mezzotint.
490 by 610mm (19.25 by 24 inches).
1059
notes:
Northcote's prowling tiger, with the head of a dead wolf to the right, was engraved by John Murphy (1755-c1817). The tiger's "stance and mask-like face suggest we are to be his next prey. Conceived during the opening years of the French Revolution, the image may be read as a metaphor warning Britons against the dangerous political forces on the loose across the Channel" (the Met online).
James Northcote (1746-1831), born in Plymouth he was apprenticed at an earl...
James Northcote (1746-1831), born in Plymouth he was apprenticed at an earl...
bibliography:
Dictionary of National Biography, vol. 41, p.190-193, 1895; the Met 37.17.33
provenance: