- 1800 2
- 1801
1801 - 1801
- 1801
- 1802
- 1802
- 1802
1802 - 1802
1802 - 1802
1802 - 1803
- 1803
- 1803
1803 - 1803
- 1803
- 1804
- 1804
- 1804
- 1804
1804 - 1804
- 1805
- 1805
1805 - 1805
1805 - 1806
1806 - 1806
- 1806
- 1806
- 1807
1807 - 1807
- 1807
- 1808
- 1809
1809 - 1809
1809 - 1810
- 1810
- 1811
- 1813
- 1817
- 1817
- 1828-1836
- 1830-1840
- 1832
- 1840-1860
- 1845 - 1855
- 1864
- 1883
- 1903
- 1913
- 1913
- 1916 Woman
- 1922
- A check in the Park at Bagatelle
A check in the Park at Bagatelle Hunting dress 1807 - A Dinka Dandy
The portrait represents what might be styled a Dinka dandy, distinguished for unusually long hair. By continual combing and stroking with hair-pins, the hair of the negro loses much of its close curliness. Such was the case here: the hair, six inches long, was trained up into points like tongues of flame, and these, standing stiffly up all round his head, gave the man a fiendish look, which was still further increased by its being dyed a foxy red. This tint is the result of continual washing with cow-urine; a similar effect can be produced by the application for a fortnight of a mixture of dung and ashes. - A Drive in a Whiskey
- A gambling hell in the Palais-Royal
A gambling hell in the Palais-Royal 1800 - A game of Emigrette
- A gathering in the Luxembourg Gardens
A gathering in the Luxembourg Gardens 1800 - A Niam-niam girl
The social position of the Niam-niam women differ materially from what is found amongst other negroes in Africa. The Bongo and Mittoo women are on the same familiar terms with the foreigner as the men, and the Monbuttoo ladies are as forward , inquisitive and prying as can be imagined; but the women of the Niam-niam treat every stranger with marked reserve. Whenever I met any women coming along a narrow pathway in the woods or on the steppe, I noticed that they always made a wide circuit to avoid me, and returned into the path further on; and many a time I saw them waiting at a distance with averted face until I had passed by. - A painted face
By the reign of James I. this ridiculous fashion had become common. All sorts of curious devices were made use of—spots, stars, crescents, and in one woodcut a coach and coachman with two horses and postilions appear upon the lady's forehead. The fashion continued for a long period; in fact, during the greater part of the Georgian era, when it had degenerated into mere spots or small patches. At the close of the eighteenth century it had entirely disappeared. - A Public Room at Frascatis
A Public Room at Frascatis - A walk in the Tuileries Gardens
A walk in the Tuileries Gardens