Contemporary Review
(1867),
Volume 4, p. 132.
Volume 4, p. 132.
Two Hundred Sketches, Humorous and Grotesque.
By Gustave Doré. London: F. Warne & Co.
By Gustave Doré. London: F. Warne & Co.
These drawings are, indeed, outrageously grotesque. We feel
ourselves in the plight of the lover of old, "Perhaps it was right to
dissemble your love, but—why did you kick me down-stairs?" So here—any
queer contortions of the human face or form may pass muster: but—why all these
monsters? Wc own to a sort of revulsion from the big-head-and-little-body kind
of caricature. Respected prelates do not look well thus put into two foci: nor
do imaginary beings such as those with which this book is filled. Such a preponderance
of the pure grotesque seems to us to swamp genuine humour. The one natural
group of " doggies," on p. 12, strikes our fancy more than most
things in the book.
When M. Doré comes to the caricature of real life, he does
not seem to us to shine. E.g., "M. Berniquet's Visit to the Country"
is not for a moment to be compared with the M. Jabot and M. Pipon of our
younger days. The likenesses are not at all well kept up, and the humour is
sometimes of the flattest.
But there are some very clever things. Among them are the
sketches called " Consequences of the London Exhibition of 1862." The
boat full of Chinese on p. 42, and the triple groups sleeping on a roof at 300
francs each, are the best of these. Here and there we have some broad humour:
but never, either in drawing or humour, does M. Dore rise to the level of our
best English caricaturists. The fun is torn to rags, not quiet and lurking, as
in their drawings. And four out of five of the jokes are, at least in their
English dress, not worth having, to begin with.
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