From La Meduse to the Titanic: Gericault’s Raft in Journalistic Illustration up to 1912

This essay discusses the practices of journalistic illustration in nineteenth-century weekly illustrated magazines in London: magazines such as the 'Illustrated London News 'and the 'Graphic'. It focuses on the way that Géricault’s schema for representing shipwreck survivors in r...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tom Gretton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2013-04-01
Series:19 : Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.19.bbk.ac.uk/articles/661
id doaj-ebc287d8cfc14ddba9cde8c407057545
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ebc287d8cfc14ddba9cde8c4070575452021-06-02T09:50:40ZengOpen Library of Humanities19 : Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century1755-15602013-04-011610.16995/ntn.661601From La Meduse to the Titanic: Gericault’s Raft in Journalistic Illustration up to 1912Tom Gretton0Universty College LondonThis essay discusses the practices of journalistic illustration in nineteenth-century weekly illustrated magazines in London: magazines such as the 'Illustrated London News 'and the 'Graphic'. It focuses on the way that Géricault’s schema for representing shipwreck survivors in rafts and boats, mostly in the processes of rescue, was a resource for journalistic illustration in London. It concentrates on the period after 1880, ending with a discussion of the presence of ‘The Raft’ in reports of the 'Titanic'’s sinking. The essay considers some of the ways in which Géricault’s schema may have been a resource in the mythopoetic response to the 'Titanic' disaster.   The essay discusses the persistence of hand-made illustrations in the period of the ‘domestication’ of the half-tone screen (from the 1890s onwards), which introduced the photographic image (as distinct from hand-drawn or wood-engraved images derived from photographs) into magazine illustration. In doing this it engages with the ways in which the coexistence of (half-tone accounts of) hand-made pictures and of (half-tone accounts of) photographs in the pages of magazines of the 'ILN' genre destabilized the truth-effects of hand-made illustration and threw the relative lack of affective power of the reportorial photograph into relief. It also discusses the implications for journalistic illustration of the difference between the telegram-speed ‘global-village-ization’ of the news community in the last quarter of the nineteenth century and the ‘snail-mail’ speed of transoceanic communication of pictures, until after the end of the First World War.   The essay aligns the picture-making logic of journalistic illustration with that of easel painting, to think about both these visual-culture-production milieux in terms of the manipulation of inherited visual resources, on the one hand in the praxis of picture-making, and on the other in pursuit of visible intertextualities so as to make ‘publics’ and to gratify contemporary interpretative communities. To do this the essay looks briefly at some possible sources for Géricault’s pictorial solutions to his representational tasks, both narrative and political, and considers some occurrences of the ‘Medusa’ compositional schema and iconography in the middle decades of the nineteenth century, from the UK and elsewhere, in broadsheet imagery and in magazines and newspapers. It then identifies some of the ways in which journalistic illustrators of the end of the 'Titanic' used Géricault’s schema as a way at once of fabricating and of adding resonance to their supposedly reportorial pictures.   The essay shows how ‘authorship’ of magazine illustration was collective and distributed, complicating the interpretation of visible intertextualities. This discussion of issues of interpretation will use the distinction between ‘publics’ and ‘audiences’, and consider the interpretative communities of reader-viewers of magazines of the 'ILN' genre in the period 'c'.1880 to 'c'.1912 in relation to the interpretative and theoretical resources of the twenty-first-century art historian.http://www.19.bbk.ac.uk/articles/661GéricaultThe GraphicIllustrated London NewsInterpretative communitiesMagazine illustrationPhotomechanical‘Raft of the Medusa’RecyclingTitanicWood engraving
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tom Gretton
spellingShingle Tom Gretton
From La Meduse to the Titanic: Gericault’s Raft in Journalistic Illustration up to 1912
19 : Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
Géricault
The Graphic
Illustrated London News
Interpretative communities
Magazine illustration
Photomechanical
‘Raft of the Medusa’
Recycling
Titanic
Wood engraving
author_facet Tom Gretton
author_sort Tom Gretton
title From La Meduse to the Titanic: Gericault’s Raft in Journalistic Illustration up to 1912
title_short From La Meduse to the Titanic: Gericault’s Raft in Journalistic Illustration up to 1912
title_full From La Meduse to the Titanic: Gericault’s Raft in Journalistic Illustration up to 1912
title_fullStr From La Meduse to the Titanic: Gericault’s Raft in Journalistic Illustration up to 1912
title_full_unstemmed From La Meduse to the Titanic: Gericault’s Raft in Journalistic Illustration up to 1912
title_sort from la meduse to the titanic: gericault’s raft in journalistic illustration up to 1912
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series 19 : Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
issn 1755-1560
publishDate 2013-04-01
description This essay discusses the practices of journalistic illustration in nineteenth-century weekly illustrated magazines in London: magazines such as the 'Illustrated London News 'and the 'Graphic'. It focuses on the way that Géricault’s schema for representing shipwreck survivors in rafts and boats, mostly in the processes of rescue, was a resource for journalistic illustration in London. It concentrates on the period after 1880, ending with a discussion of the presence of ‘The Raft’ in reports of the 'Titanic'’s sinking. The essay considers some of the ways in which Géricault’s schema may have been a resource in the mythopoetic response to the 'Titanic' disaster.   The essay discusses the persistence of hand-made illustrations in the period of the ‘domestication’ of the half-tone screen (from the 1890s onwards), which introduced the photographic image (as distinct from hand-drawn or wood-engraved images derived from photographs) into magazine illustration. In doing this it engages with the ways in which the coexistence of (half-tone accounts of) hand-made pictures and of (half-tone accounts of) photographs in the pages of magazines of the 'ILN' genre destabilized the truth-effects of hand-made illustration and threw the relative lack of affective power of the reportorial photograph into relief. It also discusses the implications for journalistic illustration of the difference between the telegram-speed ‘global-village-ization’ of the news community in the last quarter of the nineteenth century and the ‘snail-mail’ speed of transoceanic communication of pictures, until after the end of the First World War.   The essay aligns the picture-making logic of journalistic illustration with that of easel painting, to think about both these visual-culture-production milieux in terms of the manipulation of inherited visual resources, on the one hand in the praxis of picture-making, and on the other in pursuit of visible intertextualities so as to make ‘publics’ and to gratify contemporary interpretative communities. To do this the essay looks briefly at some possible sources for Géricault’s pictorial solutions to his representational tasks, both narrative and political, and considers some occurrences of the ‘Medusa’ compositional schema and iconography in the middle decades of the nineteenth century, from the UK and elsewhere, in broadsheet imagery and in magazines and newspapers. It then identifies some of the ways in which journalistic illustrators of the end of the 'Titanic' used Géricault’s schema as a way at once of fabricating and of adding resonance to their supposedly reportorial pictures.   The essay shows how ‘authorship’ of magazine illustration was collective and distributed, complicating the interpretation of visible intertextualities. This discussion of issues of interpretation will use the distinction between ‘publics’ and ‘audiences’, and consider the interpretative communities of reader-viewers of magazines of the 'ILN' genre in the period 'c'.1880 to 'c'.1912 in relation to the interpretative and theoretical resources of the twenty-first-century art historian.
topic Géricault
The Graphic
Illustrated London News
Interpretative communities
Magazine illustration
Photomechanical
‘Raft of the Medusa’
Recycling
Titanic
Wood engraving
url http://www.19.bbk.ac.uk/articles/661
work_keys_str_mv AT tomgretton fromlamedusetothetitanicgericaultsraftinjournalisticillustrationupto1912
_version_ 1721405495084843008