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  1. Robert Seymour (1798 – 20 April 1836) was a British illustrator known for his illustrations for The Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens and for his caricatures. He committed suicide after arguing with Dickens over the illustrations for Pickwick .

  2. hmn.wiki › es › Robert_Seymour_(illustrator)Robert Seymour Ilustrador

    Robert Seymour (1798 - 20 de abril de 1836) fue un ilustrador británico conocido por sus ilustraciones para The Pickwick Papers de Charles Dickens y por sus caricaturas. Se suicidó después de discutir con Dickens sobre las ilustraciones de Pickwick .

  3. A popular and prolific illustrator and satirical cartoonist before Dickens burst upon the London scene in 1834, Robert Seymour (1798?-1836) specialized in sporting subjects. Influenced by the work of caricaturist George Cruikshank (1792-1878), Seymour gave up a career as a draftsman to devote himself to illustration, beginning under the ...

  4. 2 de mar. de 2023 · We find a more apocalyptic vision of the future in Robert Seymour’s 1820s The March of the Intellect, where a jolly automaton stomps across society. Its head is a literal stack of knowledge — tomes of history, philosophy, and mechanic manuals power two gas-lantern eyes.

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  5. Like Dickens, Robert Seymour endured an impoverished childhood. He exhibited his first painting at the Royal Academy when he was twenty-two years old. Despite the rejection of his subsequent submissions, he continued to paint numerous portraits and began illustrating books.

  6. dickenslit.com › dickens-illustrators › robert-seymourRobert Seymour - Charles Dickens

    Robert Seymour (1798-1836) was a caricaturist and illustrator of part of the Pickwick Papers, by Charles Dickens. Robert Seymour was born in 1798 in Somerset in England to Henry Seymour and Elizabeth Bishop. When Seymour was still a child, his father died, leaving his wife and children destitute.

  7. 18 de ene. de 2017 · Robert Seymour, “The Birth of Political Sin,” The Looking Glass, Nov. 1831. Seymour shows the Duke of Wellington, the hero of Waterloo and the leader of the Tories, as a character from Greek myth.