Your critical guide to arts, culture and going out in the capital
Cartoon Museum
Cartoon Museum review
On the ground floor of the Cartoon Museum - a transformed former dairy - the cartoons are displayed chronologically, starting with the early eighteenth-century when high-society types back from the Grand Tour introduced the Italian practice of the caricatura to polite society. From Hogarth the displays move on to British cartooning's 'golden age' (1770-1830). 'Modern times' covers political wartime cartoons and social commentary produced between 1914 and 1961. The 'new satire' section - works published from 1961 onwards - includes Ralph Steadman, Steve Bell, Dave Brown, Matt and others. Downstairs the artists' names are immediately recognisable; upstairs - where comic strip art from 2000AD, the Dandy and the Beano is displayed - is much more about the characters portrayed: Rupert the Bear, Dan Dare, Judge Dredd et al. The excellent shop is recommended, as is the library where - by appointment - you can search the catalogue of some 3,000 books. Children's animation workshops are held during school holidays.