Louis Wain Pen and Watercolour Cartoon Cats Playing Cricket

  • Louis Wain
  • Original Cartoon
  • Pen and watercolour
  • anthropomorphic cats
  • Humorous
  • Framed and glazed

Description

Original Louis Wain Cartoon in pen and watercolour. It depicts a group of cats playing cricket with the focus on a ginger cat who is batting with a certain amount of vigour. This funny little picture is in remarkably good condition given its age and is highly collectible. It is framed and glazed. The frame dimensions are 32 x 28 cm, with the picture itself measuring 22 x 17 cm.

Louis Wain was a very well known cartoonist at the turn of the last century, who depicted cats in humorous anthropomorphic poses in all his pictures. He has a huge following and his original paintings and drawings are highly sought after. Many of his paintings were turned into calendars, jigsaw puzzles, postcards, etc.

The following is an extract from a newspaper article on this very painting…

The Cartoonist, his life, his wife and his cats.

Louis Wain is a name that many people will be familiar with but many will not know why. He was born in Clerkenwell in London in 1860. He had a cleft palate and his parents were advised not to send him to school until he was 10. The young Louis spent a lot of his time exploring his surroundings and drawing what he saw. He didn’t settle at his first school when he did eventually go there and was a constant truant, so he was sent to art school. Upon leaving school his first job was to teach art at the West London School of Art, which he had attended as a pupil, but at the age of 20 he became the head of his family as his father died unexpectedly and he had to look after his mother and five sisters. Ultimately this lead to him leaving teaching to become a freelance artist. He had immediate and considerable success working with many of the primary news journals of the time painting country house and animal scenes. He became known as one of the foremost animal painters of his time.

In 1883 he married the love of his life, his sisters’ governess, Emily Richardson, who shared his love for animals. Sadly, she contracted breast cancer and died only three years into their marriage. Wain was totally devastated, his one saviour was his wife’s favourite cat, Peter, who Wain spent a lot of time drawing and painting. He surrounded himself with more and more cats, which became the sole focus of his art.

His first painting of anthropomorphised cats was published in 1886 in The Illustrated London News and young Louis did not look back. He became a very prolific artist of cats doing all sorts of human things. Cats playing golf, boxing, drinking, playing cards, playing musical instruments, giving speeches, etc., etc. Frequently producing hundreds of paintings a year!

He illustrated over 100 children’s books both under his own name and pseudonyms. Plus from 1901 to 1915 he produced The Louis Wain Annual, which are still collected today as are his many and varied postcards and calendars.

Wain should have been wealthy from all this activity and success but none of his sisters had married and he was still responsible for supporting them all, furthermore, he was not a very competent businessman, making a number of very dubious and ultimately disastrous investments.

I’m sorry to say that by 1924 Wain was pretty much penniless and had developed severe schizophrenia and spent his last years in a number of different mental institutions, including Bethlem Hospital in Southwark. He continued to paint his cats right to the end, but passed away in 1939.

His legacy is around us all still to this day with his humorous cats in all sorts of hilarious poses.