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Gallery

Explorable Archive of Art from the Romantic Era

Section Editors: Theresa M. Kelley
, Jacob Leveton
Page Title

Explore All Images

Two lovers in a dark room

Edward Calvert

This intimate domestic scene portrays two lovers who, because of their profound absorption in each other, are simultaneously spectator and spectacle.

The Chamber Idyll

A crowd bets on a cock fight

William Hogarth

This image depicts a cockfight, with special emphasis on the diversity of spectators in attendance and their singularity of purpose (gambling).

The Cockpit

Boat in Midst of Battle

Tudor Horton

The battle between the Constitution and the Guerrier resulted in an American victory. The prominence of the British and American flags emphasizes not only the nationality of the victor, but also of the defeated.

The Constitution and Guerrier

No image available

The Cruikshankian Momus

A Death's Head Moth

Unknown

This image depicts a death's-head moth on a white background, with wings outstretched.

The Death's Head Moth

drawbridge

Giambattista Piranesi

Piranesi’s Carcerid’Invenzione is a series of 16 menacing, mysterious etchings that depict impossible architectural structures inhabited by laboring, manacled, or tortured men. The series originally appeared in the 1740s as Invenzioni capric.

The Drawbridge

An explanatory print of Baldwin's balloon flight

Unknown

An aerial map of rural Chester identifying the specific geographic details of Baldwin’s route during his flight.

The Explanatory Print

Angels falling from Heaven

John Milton, John Martin

John Martin was one of the most popular artists of his day. The artist Thomas Cole, the author Victor Hugo, and the composer Hector Berlioz all drew inspiration from Martin’s work. He was one of the few painters who did his own engravings.

The Fall of the Rebel Angels

A woman breastfeeds her child

James Gillray

A viscountess sits between a portrait of a peasant woman breastfeeding a baby, the frame of which reads “Maternal Love," and a window revealing a carriage waiting outside, its attendant holding its door open.

The Fashionable Mamma,—or—the Convenience of Modern Dress

No image available

The Heads of the Table

A page of text depicting an Indian woman and her baby

Unknown

In this image, a Hindu woman abandons her baby in a basket hung from a tree. The illustration serves as a counterexample to the moral lesson of the accompanying text, while also serving as an example of the absence of "Christian" virtue in "pagan" cultures.

The Hindoo Woman and her Babe

Illustrations explaining various properties of light

Unknown
In collaboration with Joseph Priestley

“Plate II” features seven illustrations to accompany the sections of Priestley’s text, entitled “Period I: The Revival of Letters in Europe,” and “Period II: From the Revival of letters in Europe to the discoveries of Snellius and Descartes.” Figure 10 illustrated a parabolic mirror or burni

The History and Present State of Discoveries Relating to Vision, Light, and Colours, Plate II

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