15929993680001312637261000Standard Recordobject-15297170966176083517029082620001709661757637fitz-onlineadlib-object-15297https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/152976266f952-9783-39d0-a019-46e5c60533df5referenceagent-48418adlib-agent-48418177d6ab1-5ca9-31a9-aa34-652fb91ac7f7Frost, Arthur Burdettreferenceagent-36610adlib-agent-36610da599e1b-3eb0-3446-9101-fae40a73fa6dDickens, Charlespersonreferenceagent-153860adlib-agent-15386046425efe-f383-3811-a565-ef7e87d137b0Frost, Arthur B.referenceterm-108657adlib-term-108657c170cd8e-fc63-3446-81a4-6682b5979808lead-glazed earthenwarereferenceterm-42688adlib-term-426884df03958-5ee6-3a50-ada9-491bb6445fdfArt Potterybrownreferenceterm-32638adlib-term-3263897b8d1a5-7b8f-3a2a-a275-7d001aeaae2benamelreferenceterm-37088adlib-term-370880a28530e-cea8-3d08-b792-a30bf68f524fclear glazeDecorationreferenceterm-120086adlib-term-120086cdecca31-5ec3-3fe3-9e5d-455d9771fda5painting overglazereferenceterm-122641adlib-term-122641d5fb75d8-097d-3fd7-8e70-87e9d96d77f7glazingreferenceterm-98314adlib-term-983146682fa07-596f-3477-929e-249e72303d17caricatureApplied ArtsSquare, white earthenware tile with over-glaze image painted in brown enamel.A gawky, bearded, young man, wearing an ill-fitting check suit and high collar, stands pigeon-toed looking at a dog. The dog, a dachshund or similar, is performing tricks – standing on its forelegs and winding its tail around its raised rear body. At right is an American flag above the initials A.B.F (part of the ‘F’ rubbed away), below which is the inscription ‘The […] Frost on record’. The tile is an industrially produced blank, from pressed dust; on the reverse is an impressed diamond pattern. It is fixed in a (later) wooden frame and stand.C.5F-19491accession numberC.5F-194915297priref15297urihttps://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/15297https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/15297on back of tileinscribed on labelA.B. FROST. AMERICAN ARTISTlabelreferenceagent-149638adlib-agent-1496387376d833-d0a7-3be0-916e-9c892b7a24d8The Fitzwilliam MuseumBequeathed by Miss Dorothy Barnard, the artist’s daughterreferenceagent-151852adlib-agent-15185235fa6457-fce0-3704-8fd5-c106f018fd10Barnard, Dorothy194919491949bequeathedEntry date: 19491880CE1880circa1880decoratorreferenceagent-7301adlib-agent-730123a1696f-3ce8-3d6d-a9dc-4d54905e9daaBarnard, FrederickFred(erick) Barnard (1846-96), the son of a silversmith, was an illustrator, caricaturist, genre painter and portraitist. After training in Paris, he contributed to journals, such as 'Punch', ‘Harper’s Weekly’ and the 'Illustrated London News' and became known as an illustrator of Dickens and Bunyan. He also showed large-scale canvasses at the Royal Academy which commented on urban social conditions; a reviewer greeted his ‘Saturday Night in the East End’, 1876, as amongst ‘the most remarkable illustrations of London low-life […] full of grime and flare, and of human uncouthness’. He settled for a time in Broadway, Gloucestershire, where John Singer Sargent painted his wife Alice Faraday (‘Mrs Frederick Barnard’, 1885), and his two daughters Polly and Dorothy (‘Carnation, Lily, Lily, Rose’, 1885-86) [Tate, nos. N05901 and N01615] , and his neighbours included Henry James and Edmund Gosse, the latter recording him wearing an ‘enormous stage slouch hat’. The Fitzwilliam Museum also holds a portrait of Dorothy Barnard, the donor, painted by Sargent in 1889.One of a series of seven tiles, each depicting a fellow contemporary artist, this design is a caricature of Arthur Burdett Frost (1851-1928), an American illustrator and graphic artist. Though color blind, Frost illustrated more than ninety books as well as journals such as Harper's Weekly and Life magazine. An ardent sportsman, he also produced dramatic hunting and shooting watercolours, oils and prints. In 1877- 1878, Frost came to London to study with other cartoonists, and worked with Barnard, Charles Green and others on a Household Edition of Dickens novels published by Chapman & Hall. Later he published stories formed of sequential drawings with captions, a form that would develop into comic strips.referenceterm-108070adlib-term-1080707e278258-23e3-3d5b-a4ff-ab5ecacb4bf319th Century, Late#referenceterm-106216adlib-term-106216825b8379-ec94-388e-9a59-624e40c090d0literalEnglandEnglandcountrypossibly LondonLondonreferenceterm-107611adlib-term-107611790e5a19-a186-34d5-a16e-2d8dff9f6247white earthenwareHeightcm15.2Widthcm15.2referencemedia-12447adlib-media-12447bfd676d7-cb3e-3d12-8477-d892e9b4f27fjpegaa/aa11/C_5F_1949.jpg1heightpixels740widthpixels57017029265607831imagejpegaa/aa11/mid_C_5F_1949.jpg1heightpixels649widthpixels50017029265607831imagejpegaa/aa11/C_5F_1949.jpg1heightpixels740widthpixels57017029265607831imagejpegaa/aa11/preview_C_5F_1949.jpg1heightpixels325widthpixels25017029265607831image0media
imagereferenceterm-30982adlib-term-30982952a2227-ce0e-31a3-a0d9-40085991be5btilehistory noteBequeathed by Miss Dorothy Barnard, the artist’s daughter1referenceobject-3851adlib-object-38511fa07241-5c29-30e8-a9e3-ef3f260631381reference1term-106226adlib-term-106226194567f2-2bcd-3446-ae31-652386611815paintingpainting1referenceobject-15278adlib-object-15278ca9f5f00-a7dd-33b8-a12f-e1abe55b3b401reference1term-30982adlib-term-30982952a2227-ce0e-31a3-a0d9-40085991be5btiletile1referenceobject-15281adlib-object-15281c31caa2b-7098-3ae5-83dd-8b1b7d06467b1reference1term-30982adlib-term-30982952a2227-ce0e-31a3-a0d9-40085991be5btiletile1referenceobject-15284adlib-object-15284000cdcb7-3c02-36df-883f-6c87139fe4d01reference1term-30982adlib-term-30982952a2227-ce0e-31a3-a0d9-40085991be5btiletile1referenceobject-15288adlib-object-152885710a435-9b29-336a-ae5a-15a22c0b85e91reference1term-30982adlib-term-30982952a2227-ce0e-31a3-a0d9-40085991be5btiletile1referenceobject-15295adlib-object-15295a3e174a5-0823-36e0-87b6-7f1590378daa1reference1term-30982adlib-term-30982952a2227-ce0e-31a3-a0d9-40085991be5btiletile1referenceobject-15299adlib-object-15299dea90039-1bcb-368e-a8bc-e0c82d62f4c01reference1term-30982adlib-term-30982952a2227-ce0e-31a3-a0d9-40085991be5btiletilereferenceagent-149638adlib-agent-1496387376d833-d0a7-3be0-916e-9c892b7a24d8The Fitzwilliam Museumreferencepublication-1505adlib-publication-15055840e41d-a70b-3d4e-bfb0-fd4e207534c1Dictionary of Artists 1760-1893Ref. For details of Frederick Barnard's contributions to Punch from 1863pp. 518-9referencepublication-1506adlib-publication-15061fd08996-db82-3a45-8e1c-e30e9672985cThe History of Punchreferencepublication-1507adlib-publication-150762275f8b-ae42-383b-8221-49252a6ad170The Royal Academy Exhibitors 1769-1904referencepublication-1504adlib-publication-15040a2e322f-33c4-30c9-8fb6-86679f33ba31Dictionnaire des Peintres, Sculpteurs, Dessinateurs et Graveursreferencepublication-7581adlib-publication-75817ed3ea82-3e3d-355c-b7a3-80f1297bb3c0Scenes and characters from the works of Charles Dickensreferenceterm-12611adlib-term-12611834b65f7-cfad-3dec-bca8-253a9e8b4281Arts and Crafts (movement)referenceterm-26969adlib-term-269697181d5f7-c0a3-317f-8460-43acf32a6741illustrationobject namereferenceterm-101823adlib-term-101823958d31a8-4613-363e-829f-d8dd5ffdba70flaganimalreferenceterm-108326adlib-term-10832673c305ae-c749-393c-a7ea-dcf8e4627c7dsausage dogliteralflagflagliteralsausage dogsausage dogreferenceterm-30982adlib-term-30982952a2227-ce0e-31a3-a0d9-40085991be5btiletilewhite earthenware tiles, painted overglaze with brown enamelreferenceterm-120069adlib-term-12006906b69c8e-830d-32aa-875b-3bf487648865dust pressingArthur Burdett Frost caricatureobject
OBJECT