Low Life and High Life

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Year1829
Dimensions45.7 cm × 35.2 cm (18.0 in × 13.9 in)
Low Life and High Life
ArtistEdwin Landseer
Year1829
TypeOil on mahogany, genre painting
Dimensions45.7 cm × 35.2 cm (18.0 in × 13.9 in)
LocationTate Britain, London

Low Life and High Life are twin 1829 oil paintings by the British artist Edwin Landseer. It depicts the contrasting lifestyles of two dogs in pre-Victorian England.[1][2] Differing breeds, one of which is shown in a clearly working class setting while the other is in an upper class background. It is part of a long tradition using contrasting images to illustrate class divides in art.[3]

High Life by Edwin Landseer, 1829

Both paintings were displayed at the Royal Academy Exhibition of 1831 at Somerset House in London. Today they are in the collection of the Tate Britain in Pimlico, having been given to the nation by the art collector Robert Vernon in 1847 as part of the large Vernon Gift.[4][5]

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