Artists and Pirates: Satirical Prints in Georgian London and Dublin


Silvia Beltrametti and William Laffan

Regular price €30.00

Churchill House Press, In association with Centro Di, 2025
Hardback, 184 pages

Single sheet satire – caricature – emerged in the louche milieu where politics and high society of late Georgian London intersected. Artists such as James Gillray (1756-1815) and Thomas Rowlandson (1757-1827) combined devastating wit with graphic brilliance to lampoon the great and the good, the vain and the vacuous, and create timeless images inspired by moments of fleeting controversy or scandal. Availing of a legal loophole, under which copyright law protecting images did not apply to Ireland, a business of pirating caricatures by London satirists also flourished in Regency Dublin. The work of these Dublin plagiarists – which though derivative is paradoxically inventive and vibrant – as well as prints of Irish subject matter by English caricaturists such as Gillray is the subject of a new book Artists and Pirates: Satirical Prints in Georgian London and Dublin.

 Caricature dealt both with the great political issues of the day, religious toleration and contested concepts of liberty, but was also a vehicle to explore less elevated often risqué, sometimes scatological or pornographic, subject matter. Single-sheet satire, Georgian England’s greatest artistic innovation and its smaller but still dynamic offshoot in early nineteenth-century Dublin offer a compelling, ever fascinating – and very funny – chronicle of the human comedy.