No fragments of this cartoon remain; perhaps the best copy is that in possession of the Earl of Leicester at Holkham Hall.
The large composition of the Deluge gives us some idea of what the cartoon of Pisa may have been like.
Benvenuto Cellini’s account is important, for he himself copied the cartoon in 1513 just before it disappeared.
The most complete copy of the cartoon is the monochrome painting belonging to the Earl of Leicester, at Holkham Hall.
Buggiardini also executed a painting from the cartoon of the master, the Madonna and Child with Angels, number 809, of the National Gallery.
The Madonna and Infant Christ, St. John the Baptist and Angels, an unfinished painting on wood by Bugiardini, the Cartoonalone by Michael Angelo.
I interrupted myself here, to drop a line to Shirley Brooks and suggest a cartoon for Punch.
I had clipped a cartoon from a morning paper, which pictured him as upsetting the Tsar's throne--the kind of thing he was likely to enjoy.
Michelangelo chose for his cartoonan incident of the war with Pisa, in which the Florentine soldiers, bathing in the Arno, are surprised by the sound of trumpets, and run to arms.
Like Michelangelo's, his cartoon is lost, and has come to us only in sketches, and in a fragment of Rubens.
Much of it there must have been in that lost picture of Paradise, which he prepared as a cartoon for tapestry, to be woven in the looms of Flanders.
The United States, since then, has been prepared to take up all of its obligations when due, but it must be acknowledged that at the time this cartoon was published the outlook was rather dark and gloomy.
In its essential character this picture resembles the cartoon for a painting upon glass in the cathedral of Aix.
Another cartoon in the great series for the Berlin Campo Santo, upon which Cornelius is now engaged, represents the happiness of those who hunger and thirst after righteousness.
The cartoon is at present in Dresden, where it will be cut in wood by the artist's old friend, Director von Schnorr, for the Art-Guild there.
Morgan’s cartoon entitled “A Brown Study” was resented by all decent-minded men, and both papers failed because they entirely misunderstood the tastes of those who at that time purchased weekly journals.
He had taken his revolver from his belt, and was pointing with it to “Ape’s” cartoon of Beaconsfield which hung opposite my desk.
She dropped down in the gloom of the place on the broad, cold flags of the floor in the deepest shadow, where the light from without did not reach, and beneath the cartoon of the gods of Oblivion.
A year of labor, and the cartoon could be transferred to the permanent life of the canvas; and he was a master of color, and loved to wrestle with its intricacies as the mariner struggles with the storm.
Arslan turned from the great cartoon of the gods in Pherae, and went out into the daylight, and stripped and plunged into the cold and turbulent stream.
One morning Holloway was found foaming with rage in the Cartoon Gallery.
This cartoon came into the possession of the Foundling Hospital by the conditional bequest of Prince Hoare, Esq.
I do not know how many times the Vanity Fair cartoonof Archer has been reprinted, but I learn on good authority that, for years, not a single day has been known to pass on which the caricature was not asked for.
On the right of the cartoon is the figure of grammar; beneath is Priscian.
I followed and secured a seat opposite him, and made the mental notes which resulted in the cartoon which was published very shortly afterwards in Vanity Fair.
My firstcartoon of the Duke of Beaufort (for I drew him twice for Vanity Fair) was anything but a complimentary caricature, and represented him as I had seen him standing by his coach at Ascot.
Consequently I got quite a successful caricature, and not long after the cartoon was published it was, with his approbation, reproduced in colour on the menu of some important Liberal banquet at which he was to be present.
His cartoon appeared previous to his becoming a judge.
The idea evidently was suggested, though without my knowledge, by the cartoon here reproduced.
My main object was to make a cartoon of the Bishop of Lichfield for Mrs. Maclagan, who was determined that a cartoon of her husband should appear in Vanity Fair.
During the latter part of our honeymoon we joined my wife's people at Monte Carlo, where rather an amusing incident occurred a propos of my cartoon of Kruger.
Miss Christabel Pankhurst, whom (as another lady looming largely in the eye of the public) I drew for Vanity Fair, made quite an attractive cartoon for that paper.
He was the kindest-looking of men, and the cartoon eventually came into the possession of his family.
He was so pleased with it that he selected it as a frontispiece for his biography, which appeared shortly after its publication, and when this cartoon was put up for sale with some other original drawings it fetched a very high price.
I presume the admirable cartoon of Professor Owen is yours, as you said you'd some idea of doing him for a trial of your skill.
Perino drew this cartoon on white paper, well shaded and hatched, leaving the paper itself for the lights, and executing the whole with admirable diligence.
No matter what other work he had in hand, he always contributed his weekly cartoon to Punch.
That cartoon was painted very carefully in colours by the barber on a little panel; and the picture is now to be seen in S.
Pasquin" From a cartoon depicting a scene in "Pasquin" in which Harlequinades, etc.
Cartoon celebrating the success of "Pasquin" From a contemporary cartoon showing Fielding, supported by Shakespeare, receiving an ample reward, while to Harlequin and his other opponents is accorded a halter.
Cartoon showing Fielding, in Wig and Gown, as a supporter of the Opposition From a print of 1741.
Henry Fielding holding the Banner of the "Champion" newspaper From a contemporarycartoon showing Sir Robert Walpole laughing at the "Funeral" of an Opposition Motion in Parliament.
It is to be hoped that Auckland did not know of this indelicate cartoon when he replied to Pitt.
When there seemed some prospect of England's drawing the sword for Denmark, "Punch" published a cartoon which was very popular and successful.
The Punch cartoon of the week represented him as Ariel urging his hounds to the pursuit and expulsion of Caliban.
The noble cartoon (bought by subscriptions of artists, who likewise presented the designer with a gold port-crayon) of the former is now the property of the Royal Academy.
One big cartoon of a Christmas dinner in the Capitol at Washington, revealed Mr. Lincoln holding wide the doors, and the seceded States returning to the family love feast.
For he insisted upon having a striking cartoon each day, and gave it the most conspicuous place in the paper--the top-centre of the first page.
If a cartoon is worth printing at all," he said, "it is worth printing large and conspicuous.
This cartoon is commonly supposed to be identical with that described and lauded by Vasari, which was exhibited in Florence at the time and which now seems to be lost.
Nay, it may prove possible to reconstruct the whole of the lost cartoonfrom the mass of materials we now have at hand which we may regard as the nucleus of the composition.
Leonardo's cartoon for the picture of the battle of Anghiari has shared the fate of the rival work, Michaelangelo's "Bathers summoned to Battle".
There are yet a few original drawings by Leonardo which might be mentioned here as possibly belonging to thecartoon of the Battle; such as the pen and ink sketches on Pl.
Footnote: This note occurs on a pen and ink drawing made by Leonardo as a sketch for the celebrated large cartoon in the possession of the Royal Academy of Arts, in London.
It seems to be a work of the second half of the XVIth century, a time when both the picture and the cartoon had already been destroyed.