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Men in three cornered hats and suits of the time period clamor in a square, throwing stock shares while a large ledger stands in the center announcing prices

The Wind-Buyers, Who for Wind, Lose Money and Goods, and Ruin Their Wives and Children

a hectic street scene showing the vices of the Quincampoix -- France's stock trading center

Rue Quincampoix in the Year 1720

designed to appear as scattered papers on a desk are depictions of traders crowding streets and coffee houses. There is also a playing card, a poem entitled: Bubble Poem and a copy of the London Gazette

The Bubblers Medley

The Bubblers Medley, or a Sketch of the Times: Being Europe’s Memorial for the Year 1720
Anonymous
1823 (restrike of 1721 plate)
Etching and engraving



This trompe l’oeil-style print, reissued from a plate dating to 1721, commemorates the crash while also commenting on the duplicity of the paper trade. The anonymous print- maker creates an illusion of randomly piled documents, hinting playfully at the risks of marketplace deception. Items including a playing card, a copy of the London Gazette, Jonathan Swift’s satirical poem The Bubble, a view of sea vessels, and Antoine Humblot’s famous print of rue Quinquempoix appear as if casually assembled on a desk. At lower right, a trade card—featuring, appropriately, a bubble-blowing putto—bears the address of the prominent print seller, Carington Bowles (1724–1793), whose family shop also had a branch opposite Exchange Alley.

: The Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Division of Art, Prints, and Photographs

: View catalog record

: View in Digital Collections

The New York Public Library believes that this item is in the public domain under the laws of the United States, but did not make a determination as to its copyright status under the copyright laws of other countries. This item may not be in the public domain under the laws of other countries.

Items in Empire of the Imagination

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  • designed to appear as scattered papers on a desk are depictions of traders crowding streets and coffee houses. There is also a playing card, a poem entitled: Bubble Poem and a copy of the London Gazette

    Empire of the Imagination Introduction

  • Men in three cornered hats and suits of the time period clamor in a square, throwing stock shares while a large ledger stands in the center announcing prices

    The Wind-Buyers, Who for Wind, Lose Money and Goods, and Ruin Their Wives and Children

  • designed to appear as scattered papers on a desk are depictions of traders crowding streets and coffee houses. There is also a playing card, a poem entitled: Bubble Poem and a copy of the London Gazette

    The Bubblers Medley

  • a hectic street scene showing the vices of the Quincampoix -- France's stock trading center

    Rue Quincampoix in the Year 1720

  • a tent-sized jesters cap protects dealers haggling prices and also keeps out the poor and downtrodden

    Flora’s Fools Cap

  • a relatively tattered and extremely primitive bill on plain, unbleached paper

    French royal banknote, 100 livres Tournois

  • Handwritten note on half sheet of paper that entitles Mr. Grigsby to three percent of the profits of  Newton's South Sea shares

    Isaac Newton pay order

  • designed to appear as scattered papers on a desk are depictions of traders crowding streets and coffee houses. There is also a playing card, a poem entitled: Bubble Poem and a copy of the London Gazette

    Empire of the Imagination