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Cats, Louis Wain, Mrs. Tabitha’s Academy, Antique Print, England, c. 1890s

Louis Wain (1860-1939)
Mrs. Tabitha’s Cats’ Academy
English: Late 19th century
Chromolithograph
12.25 x 16 inches, ruled border
18 x 21.75 inches, overall

A humorous print of anthropomorphic cats in which the teacher, “Mrs. Tabitha,” gives a lesson in a one-room schoolhouse filled with unruly students. The scene is a moment of classroom chaos that has interrupted a lesson on math and spelling, as seen by equations and words written on the blackboard. The students misbehave in their own mischievous ways. One shoots spit balls at Mrs. Tabitha and another pours ink on her shoulder as she scolds a sheepish-looking group of students for using her as the hanging figure in a game of hangman. In the lower left, a student wears a dunce hat and sticks out his tongue. Next to him, a student catches up on reading a book “Birds and How to Love Them.” Although undated with no publication credit, this print is typical of a popular genre of late 19th-century English humorous novelty prints of animals dressed and acting like people.

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Description

Louis Wain was an English artist known for his drawings and prints of anthropomorphic cats engaged in various human activities. In his early twenties, he began a career as an illustrator, and soon discovered the formula for his success, combining his love of cats with his charming artistic style. By the turn of the century, the adorable and mischievous Louis Wain Cat was a popular culture icon of Edwardian England, appearing on calendars, postcards, books, periodicals and as separately-issued prints. Wain also served as president of Britain’s National Cat Club. Demand for his cat pictures declined after the First World War, and in 1924 he succumbed to mental illness and was admitted in poverty to a mental hospital. He continued to paint in the hospital, however, and admirers of his artwork were moved by his plight and set up a fund to enable him to spend the rest of his days in comfort. His late works were colorful, highly stylized renditions of cats in a modern idiom that left the anthropomorphism of his early work behind. Wain was the subject of a biography by Rodney Dale called Louis Wain: The Man Who Drew Cats, first published in the 1960s, which revived interest in his work. His art has continued to fascinate both cat lovers and those interested in “outsider art” (which encompasses the art of the mentally ill).

Condition: Generally very good, recently professionally cleaned and deacidified, with light remaining toning and wear.

References:

“Louis Wain.” Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Wain (10 April 2025).

Additional information

Century

20th Century