Cartoons were used for easel paintings as well as frescos. A well-known example is Leonardo's Virgin and Child with St. Anne and the Infant St John (NG, London). Another, unusually small, is Raphael's pen-and-ink drawing The Vision of a Knight , which hangs in the National Gallery, London, beside the little panel painting which was made from it. For tapestries, cartoons were made in full colour; famous examples are the series on the Acts of the Apostles lent from the Royal Collection to the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, painted in distemper by Raphael and his pupils in 1515-16 as designs for tapestries woven for the Sistine Chapel.
In the 19th cent. designs submitted in a competition for frescos in the British Houses of Parliament were parodied in Punch. From this the word 'cartoon' acquired its present popular meaning of a humorous drawing or parody.
[Chilvers, Ian, Harold Osborne, and Dennis Farr, eds. Oxford Dictionary Of Art. Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press, 1988.]
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