Gustav Dore's and Blanchard Jerrold | Historical Visions of the Capital City | Research

The work that is seen below was produced in France from 1869, by Gustav Dore's and British journalist Blanchard Jerrold. Over a four year period they collaborated with one another in order to produce a number of deprivation based pieces of the poorer mid-Victorian London.These detailed illustrations are part of a collection of 180 different engravings. I admire them because they were able to capture the realness of this London period and allow us, who live in a modern day era, try to understand what it might have been like to live in this time.The dramatic use of light and dark give a real depth to the image and bring to life the sort of conditions many would have had to deal with. They managed to map out a lot of areas of London such as Covent Garden, which is a much more detailed approach to mapping out a city. It aims for a more realistic view and there purpose is to show not just the streets but its personality too, for example; the people who live their, the conditions they live in, the difference between classes etc.





 

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