Caricatures of Louis-Philippe  

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"La Métamorphose du roi Louis-Philippe en poire"  ("The Metamorphosis of King Louis-Philippe into a Pear") is a pen and bister-ink sketch by Charles Philipon
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"La Métamorphose du roi Louis-Philippe en poire" ("The Metamorphosis of King Louis-Philippe into a Pear") is a pen and bister-ink sketch by Charles Philipon

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The French king Louis Philippe I was caricatured many times during his reign, most famously in The Pears by Charles Philipon.

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By Charles Philipon

On February 26, 1831 Charles Philipon publishes a caricature of Louis-Philippe bearing the title Mousse de juillet. Better known as Les Bulles de savon, it shows the king carelessly blowing bubbles on which are displayed unfulfilled promises: freedom of the press, popular elections, mayors elected by the people.

Prosecuted for insulting the king (for "outrage à la personne du roi" under the Law of November 29, 1830), Philipon is acquitted.

He adds insult to injury a few months later with another lithograph, known as Le Replâtrage (The Replastering), published in La Caricature of June 30, 1831, where the king is symbolically represented as a mason erasing the traces of the July Revolution. He returned for trial in the Cour d'assises.

The "coup de théâtre" occurs at the "Le Replâtrage" hearing of 14 November 1831 when facing the judges, Philipon, sure to be condemned, plays his trump card and demonstrates in a clever argument that "tout peut ressembler au roi" ("everything can resemble the king"), and that he can not be held responsible for this resemblance. He illustrates his defense by the metamorphosis of the king's portrait in a pear.

At the conclusion of his trial before the Assize Court, Philipon was convicted of "insulting the person of the king." Arrested on 12 January 1832, he was to serve six months in prison and pay a fine of 2,000 francs, to which were added seven months resulting from other convictions. He was transferred to Sainte-Pelagie prison and later to the maison de santé of Philippe Pinel, where the regime was more favorable.

By Daumier

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Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Caricatures of Louis-Philippe" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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