Cheere the Statuary at Hyde Park Corner - A Reference from 1785.



John Cheere at Hyde Park Corner


The Observer. [A Collection of Essays. By R. Cumberland.] Vol. 1. 1785 page 33.

There is a reference to his work by the satirist Richard Cumberland in his visit to Sir Theodore and Lady Thimble. 

Describing the approach to Sir Theodore’s estate he remarks ‘upon having  caught the glimpse of a well-dressed gentleman, standing in a very becoming attitude, who, I concluded, must be the master of the mansion, waiting our approach; and as I perceived, he had his hat under his arm, expecting us with great politeness and civility, I instantly took mine from my head … but, how was I surprised to find, in place of Sir Theodore, a leaden statue on a pair of ‘scates’, painted in a blue and gold coat, with a red waistcoat, whose person, upon closer examination, I recollected to have been acquainted with some years ago, amongst the elegant group, which a certain celebrated artist exhibits to the amusement of stage-coaches and country wagons, upon their entrance into town at Hyde-Park Corner’.
















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