John Kay (caricaturist)


John Kay was a Scottish caricaturist and engraver.

Life

He was born near Dalkeith, where his father was a mason. At 13 he was apprenticed to a barber, whom he served for six years. He then went to Edinburgh, where in 1771 he obtained the freedom of the city by joining the corporation of barber-surgeons. In 1784 he published his first caricature, of Laird Robertson. In 1785, induced by the favour which greeted certain attempts of his to etch in aquafortis, he took down his barber's pole and opened a small print shop in Parliament Close. There he continued to flourish, painting miniatures, and publishing at short intervals his sketches and caricatures of local celebrities and oddities, who abounded at that period in Edinburgh society.
Kay's portraits were collected by Hugh Paton and published under the title A series of original portraits and caricature etchings by the late John Kay, with biographical sketches and illustrative anecdotes, forming a unique record of the social life and popular habits of Edinburgh at its most interesting epoch.
Kay's famous shop on the Royal Mile was destroyed during the Great Edinburgh Fire of November 1824.
He died in Edinburgh and was buried at the north end of Greyfriars Kirkyard.
The British Museum has extensive holdings of his works, including two albums apparently assembled by Kay, both described in the Catalogue of Political and Personal Satires Preserved in the Department of Prints and Drawings in the British Museum

Some persons caricatured by Kay