Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Charles Philipon (19 April 1800 – 25 January 1861) was a French lithographer, caricaturist and journalist. He was the founder and director of the satirical political journals La Caricature and of Le Charivari.

    • French
    • 25 January 1861 (aged 60), Paris
  2. 15 de abr. de 2024 · Charles Philipon (born April 19, 1806, Lyon, France—died Jan. 25, 1862, Paris) was a French caricaturist, lithographer, and liberal journalist who made caricatures a regular journalistic feature. Philipon settled in Paris in 1823, took to lithography, and began to draw caricatures for a living.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. 19 de ene. de 2024 · También hay dibujos de Charles Philipon, quien impulsó la primera revista de caricatura que data de 1830, la cual usó para ir en contra del rey Luis Felipe I de Francia, a quien dibujó como una pera. Política tuxtepecana, de Fígaro (Daniel Cabrera), en El Hijo del Ahuizote. Foto: Cortesía Museo del Estanquillo.

  4. Charles Philipon. Datos principales. Autor. Honoré Daumier. Fecha. 1832-35. Estilo. Realismo Francés. Material. Arcilla. Dimensiones. 16,4 cm. altura. Museo de Orsay. Contenidos relacionados. El espíritu crítico y satírico de Daumier no sólo se manifiesta en sus pinturas y sus grabados sino que se extiende a la escultura.

  5. 7 de sept. de 2000 · Charles Philipon (1800-1862) was the founder of the satirical illustrated press in France. With the newspapers he owned and directed, La Caricature and Le Charivari, he led an unprecedentedly coherent and vitriolic campaign of disrespect against King Louis-Philippe and his regime.

  6. Under the regime of Charles X until the Revolution of 1830 the political caricature was prohibited by the censorship and therefore Philipon's work focused more on social classes and Parisian types. In November 1830 he started publishing 'La Caricature', devoted to political satire.

  7. 4 de feb. de 2009 · Artist Charles Philipon (1800-1862) took advantage of a relaxation in censorship laws to establish La Caricature, a journal of politics and art. Through 251 issues—four pages with two or three lithographs in each—over five years from 1830 to 1835, La Caricature become the most famous of all the nineteenth-century satirical magazines.