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Item #26295 Cries of London, Plate 3rd. Sweet China Oranges, sweet China Oranges, sucrees Oranges fines. Francis WHEATLEY, L. Schiavonelli.

WHEATLEY, Francis engraved by L. Schiavonelli

Cries of London, Plate 3rd. Sweet China Oranges, sweet China Oranges, sucrees Oranges fines.

London: Published by Colnaghi & Co. No. 132 Pall Mall, July 1794. Colour printed stipple engraving. Printed on wove paper. In good condition, tight margins. Margins are scuffed with slight traces of surface soiling. Image size: 14 x 11 inches. Sheet size: 17 3/8 x 13 inches.

Two attractive ladies buy oranges from the orange peddlar.

The "Cries of London" was a recurring theme in English printmaking for over three centuries. These colourful prints form a visual record of London's "lower orders", the peddlers, charlatans, street hawkers, milkmaids, and grocers who made their living on the city streets. They give the viewer a glimpse of a long forgotten London where tradesmen would advertise their wares with a musical shout or a melodic rhyme. Different versions of the "Cries" vary in tone from idealistic visions of contented street vendors to satirical caricatures of humorous urban figures. One of the most famous series of "London Cries" is the group of pretty pictures executed by Francis Wheatley. Wheatley's series was immensely popular and enjoyed a long period of success in the English print shops. Between 1792 and 1795 Wheatley exhibited 14 paintings of the "Cries" at the Royal Academy. The pictures attracted a great deal of attention at the exhibition and Colnaghi & Co. quickly agreed to publish a series of engravings after Wheatley's famous series. Only thirteen of the fourteen paintings were engraved and they were offered for sale individually or in a portfolio collection. The prints, which were executed in stipple, were engraved by some the most noted engravers in England; artists such as Luigi Schiavonetti, Giovanni Vendramini and Thomas Gaugain all contributed their work to the series. Complete collections of the "Cries" remained immensely popular, and by 1910 they were fetching more than James Audubon's folio "Birds of America" at auction. This lovely print is plate eight in the series and depicts a cherry seller weighing out a portion of cherries for two eager children.

Roberts F. Wheatley, R.A. His Life and Works London, 1910, pp.28-32.

Item #26295

Price: $700.00

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