Dickens and his Illustrators
Explore some of the Illustrators that worked with Dickens to visualise his stories and characters...
Our exhibition explores aspects of 19th century childhood in Charles Dickensās novels alongside a range of non-fiction & texts by leading campaigners of the time.
During the 19th century advances in printing technology, such as steel or wood engraving and lithography, allowed for the inclusion in mass-produced books of good quality illustrations. Book illustrations complemented the writing by providing the reader with another layer of interpretation, a visual depiction of a character or scene.
Charles Dickens worked closely with several artists who produced illustrations for his novels and other prose writing, providing them with overviews of his storylines and directions regarding which episodes to illustrate, and occasionally criticisms of their interpretations.
In the exhibition, we showcase some of the book illustrations, emphasising key scenes within their stories and Dickensās most well-known fictional children, such as Oliver Twist, Paul Dombey and Little Nell. This blog highlights a small selection of illustrations of Charles Dickensās fictional children and their illustrators, all of which ā and many more ā are .
George Cruikshank, Oliver Twist, and āthe Cancelled Plateā
Oliver Twist or, the Parish Boyās Progress was originally published in serial form between 1837-1839 in the periodical Bentleyās Miscellany. The story is accompanied by 24 illustrations by the artist George Cruikshank, who was already famous as a satirical caricaturist and earlier worked with Dickens on Sketches by Boz.
The first illustration here portrays Oliver in what is probably the novelās most famous scene, in the workhouse daring to ask for more food. Cruikshankās depiction of the āpale thin child, somewhat diminutive in stature, and decidedly small in circumferenceā was such a defining image that it was used as the frontispiece (the illustration facing the title page) in the first complete book edition published in 1839.
The āRose Maylie and Oliverā plate illustrates the final passages of the novel when Oliver is united with his long-lost family, and highlights how authors and artists donāt always concur on how to depict text. Cruikshankās original drawing portrayed Oliver, Rose and the family gathered around a fireplace, in an idyllic Victorian family scene. Dickens, however, did not respond positively to this conventional depiction and requested Cruikshank alter it. This fireside illustration is referred to as āthe cancelled plateā and was replaced in all except the earliest impressions of the book by this church scene.
John Leech and the Children of Ignorance and Want
John Leech was a caricaturist famous for his work in the weekly satirical magazine Punch. Between 1843 and 1848 Charles Dickens wrote an annual Christmas book, and Leech was amongst a few illustrators who contributed drawings to the final four of these books.
The first and most famous Christmas book, A Christmas Carol, contained nine illustrations solely produced by Leech. This illustration depicts the moment when the children of Ignorance and Want (āThis boy is Ignorance. This girl is Wantā) are revealed to Ebenezer Scrooge by the Ghost of Christmas Present and shows how an illustrator can incorporate textual themes and meanings within a single drawing.
During the story, when requested to donate money to the poor, Scrooge refers instead to the and the existence of prisons and workhouses. Leech has chosen to depict these "wretched, abject, frightful, hideous, miserableā children against a stark industrial background. The trees are blackened and withered, and dark buildings with smoking chimneys loom behind, appearing to allude to the prisons and workhouses referred to earlier by Scrooge.
Hablot Knight Browne aka āPhizā, the 'āGreen Coversā, and Paul and Mrs Pipchin
The illustrator with the longest connection to Dickens was Hablot Knight Browne, whose pseudonym was Phiz, and who illustrated ten of Dickensās novels over a period of more than two decades.
As was usual with Dickensās novels, they were first published in serial form. Browneās illustrations needed to keep pace not only with Dickensās writing but also the serialās publishing schedule. Each serial part contained an instalment of the story plus several advertisements and was wrapped in an illustrated, green cover. By first publishing his novels in parts, Dickensās works were more affordable to a wider audience than the outright cost of an entire novel. Once the parts had been completed, they were then published as a complete book.
Two of Browneās illustrations from Dombey and Son, which was published over a period of 18 months from 1846 to 1848, are shown here. Browneās cover illustration is filled with details of characters, scenes and symbols. As the cover was seen first by the prospective reader, the illustrator needed to ensure it depicted enough elements of the plot to make it enticing without giving too much away.
Despite Dickens and Browneās close working relationship the āPaul and Mrs. Pipchinā illustration was another instance where Dickens was dissatisfied with the visual interpretation. Dickens felt that Mrs. Pipchinās age and the style of Paulās chair were depicted incorrectly and that they did not accurately represent his text. Unlike Cruikshankās ācancelled plateā, however, this illustration remained in the book.
Frederick W. Pailthorpe and the Extra-illustrated Great Expectations
In the UK, Great Expectations was first published in serial form in the periodical All the Year Round that was co-owned by Charles Dickens. Unusually for Dickens the novel was published without illustrations; his only other novel published in this manner was Hard Times.
Despite the lack of illustrations in the UK serial and first book publication, there have been numerous illustrated editions published since its first appearance in late 1860. The US magazine Harperās Weekly published the serialisation at almost the same time as the UK run, and included illustrations by John McLenan.
The copy of Great Expectations in our exhibition is the first book edition of the novel published in 1861 by Chapman and Hall, without illustrations. This copy, however, is an example of an extra-illustrated book. During the 18th and 19th centuries, readers would customise and personalise published books by inserting illustrations from other sources, a process known as extra-illustration.
In this instance, illustrations by the artist Frederick W. Pailthorpe, from the 1885 Robson & Kerslake edition of Great Expectations, have been inserted into the copy of the 1861 text. There is, therefore, a gap of almost 25 years between the bookās publication and the inclusion of this illustration showing Pip meeting Magwitch for the first time.
You can find out more about the history of book illustration and printing in our Book Studies collection and when the Library is open again, on the 4th floor (beginning at classmark 096).
Leila Kassir, Co-curator of 'Childhood in Dickensian London' and Academic Librarian: English Literature
This page was last updated on 10 January 2024