Vintage circus posters picture kangaroos and women trapped in ice

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Vintage circus posters

Send in the clowns, the acrobats — and Omikron, the living gasometer.

Europeana

20th C.

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Everything now restrains itself and anxiously hopes for just two things: bread and circuses. - Juvenal (circa A.D. 100)
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The circus, as it we think of it today, originated in Britain in 1768 by inventor Philip Astley. Astley presented shows that included horse riding tricks, acrobats, music and clowns. None of these elements were new to the British public, but Astley was the first to combine them into a single show.
Astley did not call his "Amphitheatre of Equestrian Arts" a circus. That title was awarded to a later rival's show in 1782, and became the generic term.In 1793 Englishman John Bill Ricketts brought the circus to the U.S., opening in Philadelphia. The traveling circus tent was invented by American Joshua Purdy Brown, replacing the usual wooden construction with a full canvas tent. His system became commonplace by the mid 1830s. The unique character of the American circus emerged: a traveling tent-show coupled with a menagerie and run by businessmen. It was very different model from European circuses, which for the most part remained under the control of performing families.P. T. Barnum improved on the circus format, introducing circus trains as transport between towns. He also introduced the "freak" show, exhibiting people who were excessively tall or short, fat or thin, or with medical conditions that gave them unusual appearances. Barnum's format became popular in Europe around the 1900s.The number of horse riding performances gradually declined in favor of clowns, acrobats, gymnasts and jugglers, stunt acts such as fire eaters and acts involving animals. The incorporation of animals in circus acts or in menageries has almost ceased after concerns over the standards of their accommodation, training and elements of their performances.These posters, drawn from the Circus Museum in the Netherlands, demonstrate some of the wide-ranging themes used by European circuses across the 20th century.

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Clowns are the pegs on which the circus is hung. - P. T. Barnum
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1927
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1930
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1923
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1932
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c. 1920s
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1967
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