Emigration, from the series Les Actualités
Artist/Maker
Honoré Daumier
(French, 1808–1879)
Date1856
MediumLithograph
DimensionsImage: 8 1/8 × 9 15/16 in. (20.6 × 25.2 cm)
Sheet: 9 15/16 × 10 13/16 in. (25.2 × 27.5 cm)
Sheet: 9 15/16 × 10 13/16 in. (25.2 × 27.5 cm)
Credit LineGift of Eugene L. Garbaty
PortfolioLes Actualités (Current Events)
Object number1954.159
Status
Not on viewIn 1855, a new tax defined dogs as taxable luxury items. It was believed that workers’ dogs were dirty disease carriers, and that only well-to-do bourgeois families could give a dog a proper home. When the law went into effect in 1856, almost 80,000 dogs were declared in Paris alone. Here Daumier imagines the rest of France’s dogs emigrating to neighboring countries in an act of doggie tax evasion.
Exhibition History
Satire and Sympathy: Daumier’s Human Comedy
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (February 6, 1980 - March 9, 1980 )
The Human Comedy: Chronicles of 19th Century France
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (September 6, 2013 - December 22, 2013 )
Wit and Wisdom: Political and Social Satire in the Prints of Hogarth, Goya, and Daumier
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (July 27, 2022 - December 23, 2022 )
Collections
- European
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