Hampstead Road

What did George Cruikshank do at Hampstead Road?

By Legacy Team·

Looking up at this Hampstead Road residence, you're standing before the final home of one of Victorian London's most celebrated illustrators, where George Cruikshank spent his last 28 years crafting his later works and entertaining fellow artists and writers. It was in these rooms that Cruikshank, already famous for his earlier illustrations of Charles Dickens' works, devoted himself to creating powerful temperance-themed art and his massive masterpiece "The Worship of Bacchus," reflecting his passionate crusade against alcohol.

The house served not just as his workspace but as a salon of sorts, where he hosted artistic gatherings until his death in 1878, making it a significant hub of Victorian cultural life during a period when his style and subject matter were evolving from his earlier satirical works to more serious social commentary.

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The commemorative plaque at Hampstead Road