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Vanity Fair (British magazine)

Vanity Fair was a British weekly magazine that was published from 1868 to 1914. Founded by Thomas Gibson Bowles in London, the magazine included articles on fashion, theatre, current events as well as word games and serial fiction. The cream of the period's "society magazines", it is best known for its witty prose and caricatures of famous people of Victorian and Edwardian society, including artists, athletes, royalty, statesmen, scientists, authors, actors, business people and scholars.[1][2]

This article is about the British magazine published from 1868 to 1914. For other Vanity Fair magazines, see Vanity Fair (magazines).

Taking its title from Thackeray's popular satire on early 19th-century British society, Vanity Fair was not immediately successful and struggled with competition from rival publications. Bowles then promised his readers "Some Pictorial Wares of an entirely novel character", and on 30 January 1869, a full-page caricature of Benjamin Disraeli appeared. This was the first of over 2,300 caricatures to be published. According to the National Portrait Gallery in London, "Vanity Fair's illustrations, instantly recognizable in terms of style and size, led to a rapid increase in demand for the magazine. It gradually became a mark of honour to be the 'victim' of one of its numerous caricaturists. Bowles's witty accompanying texts, full of insights and innuendoes, certainly contributed towards the popularity of these images".[2]

The Duke of Abercorn by Carlo Pellegrini ("Ape") in the 25 September 1869 issue

The Duke of Abercorn by Carlo Pellegrini ("Ape") in the 25 September 1869 issue

Benjamin Disraeli by Carlo Pellegrini in the 30 January 1869 issue

Benjamin Disraeli by Carlo Pellegrini in the 30 January 1869 issue

Mansur Ali Khan of Bengal by Alfred Thompson ("Ἀτη") in the 16 April 1870 issue

Mansur Ali Khan of Bengal by Alfred Thompson ("Ἀτη") in the 16 April 1870 issue

William Thomson, Archbishop of York, by Carlo Pellegrini in the 24 June 1871 issue

William Thomson, Archbishop of York, by Carlo Pellegrini in the 24 June 1871 issue

Charles Darwin by James Tissot ("Coïdé") in the 30 September 1871 issue

Charles Darwin by James Tissot ("Coïdé") in the 30 September 1871 issue

Caricature of Midhat Pasha by Leslie Ward ("Spy") in the 30 June 1877 issue

Caricature of Midhat Pasha by Leslie Ward ("Spy") in the 30 June 1877 issue

Thomas Hardy caricature by Leslie Ward in the 4 June 1892 issue

Thomas Hardy caricature by Leslie Ward in the 4 June 1892 issue

Captioned "Old Bones", caricature of an elderly Richard Owen in 1873

Captioned "Old Bones", caricature of an elderly Richard Owen in 1873

Alexandre Dumas fils by Théobald Chartran in the 27 December 1879 issue

Alexandre Dumas fils by Théobald Chartran in the 27 December 1879 issue

Captioned "Steel", Sir Henry Bessemer by Leslie Ward in the 6 November 1880 issue

Captioned "Steel", Sir Henry Bessemer by Leslie Ward in the 6 November 1880 issue

Rudyard Kipling by Leslie Ward on 7 June 1894

Rudyard Kipling by Leslie Ward on 7 June 1894

President Paul Kruger of the South African Republic by Leslie Ward in the 8 March 1900 issue

President Paul Kruger of the South African Republic by Leslie Ward in the 8 March 1900 issue

Suffragette Christabel Pankhurst in the 15 June 1910 issue

Suffragette Christabel Pankhurst in the 15 June 1910 issue

Queen Alexandra (unsigned) in the 7 June 1911 issue

Queen Alexandra (unsigned) in the 7 June 1911 issue

William Gillette playing Sherlock Holmes, drawn by Leslie Ward in the 27 February 1907 issue

William Gillette playing Sherlock Holmes, drawn by Leslie Ward in the 27 February 1907 issue

Henrik Ibsen by "Snapp" in the 12 December 1901 issue

Henrik Ibsen by "Snapp" in the 12 December 1901 issue

Oscar Wilde by Carlo Pellegrini in issue 812, April 1884

Oscar Wilde by Carlo Pellegrini in issue 812, April 1884

Caricature of golfer Horace Hutchinson by Leslie Ward on 19 July 1890

Caricature of golfer Horace Hutchinson by Leslie Ward on 19 July 1890

Caricature of Henry Irving in the melodrama The Bells, in the 19 December 1874 issue

Caricature of Henry Irving in the melodrama The Bells, in the 19 December 1874 issue

Caricature of Pierre and Marie Curie in the 22 December 1904 issue

Caricature of Pierre and Marie Curie in the 22 December 1904 issue

W. S. Gilbert by Leslie Ward, published on 21 May 1881

W. S. Gilbert by Leslie Ward, published on 21 May 1881

Winston Churchill by Leslie Ward, 27 September 1900

Winston Churchill by Leslie Ward, 27 September 1900

Mark Twain by Leslie Ward on 13 May 1908

Mark Twain by Leslie Ward on 13 May 1908

Captioned "Boy Scouts", Robert Baden-Powell in the 19 April 1911 issue

Captioned "Boy Scouts", Robert Baden-Powell in the 19 April 1911 issue

List of Vanity Fair artists

List of Vanity Fair caricatures

Wikibook gives a history of the magazine with focus on sportsmen

The Rowers of Vanity Fair

, UK: National Portrait Gallery.

Vanity Fair cartoons: chromolithographs by various artists 1869-1914