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Engraving: Its Origin, Processes, and History

Chapter 15: CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE
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A technical and historical survey tracing the development of printmaking from early relief methods through intaglio techniques, explaining tools and processes such as woodcut, metal engraving with the burin, dot manner, niello, mezzotint, stipple, crayon, aquatint, and etching. It follows the art's progress across Europe from medieval beginnings to nineteenth-century practice, examines the roles of painter-engravers and goldsmiths, and contrasts methods for producing tones and multiple impressions. An additional chapter addresses engraving in England and a chronological table lists prominent English practitioners, while illustrations and practical descriptions clarify workshop procedures, materials, and evolving stylistic and technical innovations.

Strange had chiefly devoted himself to classical subjects and the delineation of the human form Woollett, on the other hand, took up the branches of landscape and history, and by his skill of touch and persistently intelligent labour produced such results as were sufficient to call forth ungrudging praise from all competent judges, not only in his own country, but abroad. Among Woollett's most celebrated plates are the "Fishery," the "Battle of La Hogue," and the "Death of General Wolfe." In the printing of the last plate an accident occurred after a few proofs had been taken; a printer in careless fun taking up a hammer, cried out, "General Wolfe seems dying, I'll finish him;" saying this, he suited action to word, and unintentionally brought the hammer down on the face of the general, thus destroying by the freak of a moment the work of days of patient labour. It is said that Woollett cried on hearing the news; the painter, his art once learnt, fired by imagination, can by rapid strokes of his brush give effect to his will, while the engraver only attains his end by months of unremitting and trustful toil.

Woollett was born at Maidstone in 1735, and was apprenticed to John Tinney, who is now best known as having been the master of three distinguished pupils, Anthony Walker, John Browne, and Woollett himself. Anthony Walker engraved the well-known "Law and Physic" after Ostade, and the figures in the print of "Niobe," Woollett's first work of importance. He was the brother of the William Walker who greatly increased the effect of etching by re-biting, and it is said that Woollett, when making use of the process, was wont to exclaim, "Thank you, William Walker."62 Woollett lived in London all his life in the neighbourhood of Rathbone Place, where, when he had finished a plate, he used to celebrate the event by firing a cannon from the roof of his house; he died in 1785, and a tablet63 was placed to his memory in the cloisters of Westminster Abbey.

William Sharp was the son of a gunmaker in the Minories, where he was born in 1749, and afterwards apprenticed to Barak Longmate, a notable heraldic engraver, with whom Sharp's first essay as an apprentice was engraving pewter pots. Sharp completed the plate of West's "Landing of Charles II.," left unfinished by Woollett at his death, while many will know one of his finest works, the "Doctors of the Church," after Guido. Although he never left England, his prints were celebrated throughout Europe; he was elected honorary member of the Imperial Academy at Vienna and of the Royal Academy at Munich, but like Woollett, Strange, and Hall, was not recognised by the English Royal Academy. His religious and political views were peculiar, and being considered a dangerous character, he was summoned before the Privy Council, where at length, annoyed by repeated and, as he considered, irrelevant questions, Sharp is said to have deliberately pulled out of his pocket a prospectus of his engraving of the celebrated Polish general and patriot Kosciusko, and handing it to the council, requested their names as subscribers; this and his frank manner relieved him from the unpleasant predicament in which he found himself placed. Sharp also engraved a portrait of Richard Brothers—a fanatic whose prophecies and writings excited attention at the time—with the title of "Prince of the Hebrews," and wrote underneath: "Fully believing this to be the man whom God has appointed, I engrave his likeness." Though successful and industrious in his art, Sharp died in comparative poverty in the year 1824 at Chiswick.

Among other distinguished men who worked in line during this period must be mentioned James Heath, Anker Smith, John Keyse Sherwin, Francis Legat, Thomas Morris—a pupil of Woollett's—who engraved the fine views of the Monument, seen from Fish Street Hill, and St. Paul's Cathedral from Ludgate Hill, and lastly the unfortunate William Wynne Ryland, who engraved the portraits of George III. and Lord Bute, which Strange had refused to undertake, and who, though of greater eminence in line, is credited with bringing into notice in England the stipple manner of engraving. Ryland finally ended an adventurous career by being hanged for forging two bills on the East India Company, and by his death—notwithstanding all efforts to obtain a reprieve—justified words used in relation to the event: "Popes and monarchs have pardoned men who had committed crimes of the deepest dye—even murder—in consideration of their talents as artists; but Ryland lived in England, the land of trade and commerce, and had committed an offence against the laws of money, the god of its idolatry." Nor during the history of this period ought the names of Thomas Worlidge, David Deuchar, and the ingenious Captain Baillie to be omitted; Worlidge in the early part, and Deuchar at the close of the century, etched each in his own style with precision and effect, while William Baillie, an Irishman and retired cavalry officer (born 1723, died 1810), etched and worked in mezzotint with equal happiness and success.

William Blake (born 1757), poet, engraver, and painter, stands alone. In engraving—the laborious art by which he was content to live—he has executed admirable works, apart from his own peculiar methods, both in line, as shown in the portrait of Lavater, and in stipple, as in the "Industrious Cottager," after Morland; as poet and painter he has left songs and designs which, if soaring higher than men can follow, or even his own powers of hand and mind sufficiently express, remain for ever to arouse the wonder and excite the imagination of posterity. Though he lived in poverty, and oppressed with cares, he was always cheerful and beloved by all who knew him intimately; he was ever at work while life lasted, and died in 1827, as he had lived, a righteous and happy man. He was laid in Bunhill Fields burying-ground, but the spot where he was buried is marked by no tombstone, nor can it now be actually identified; but who that has looked at the portrait engraved by Jeens from Linnell's wondrous miniature can ever forget the face of the poet, engraver, and painter, William Blake?

Before speaking of the branch of engraving known by the name of stipple, it would be well to say a few words as to the mode of printing in colour, so prevalent at one time, and of the connection which the works of Kirkall had in relation to the method. Edward Kirkall, born at Sheffield in the year 1722, published a set of plates, in the printing of which he made use both of mezzotint and etching on copperplate combined with wood blocks (that is to say, one printing was from a copperplate, the remainder from wood blocks), in order to give variety of colour to a set of chiaroscuros and other engravings which he executed at that time. His plan differed from that of Leblond in that he used only one copperplate printing, the other tints being given by wood blocks; the results were interesting and effective, partaking more of the character of chiaroscuros, the name he himself gave to them. Apart from the failure of Leblond to realise his ingenious idea that, by the consecutive and proper superposition of three layers of primitive colours, every shade of colour might be produced in the print, there still remained another fatal defect in the process: all his colours were impressed by copperplate printing, that is, he made use of three plates successively printed one after the other on the same sheet of paper. Now a person who can realise the heavy pressure under which a copperplate has to pass so as to force it into the damp paper, in order that the paper should extract the ink from the grain in which it is held, will be able to see that the second and third printing—no matter how accurate the register—must crush the grain or burr given to the paper by the previous printing and thus destroy the beauty of the engraver's work. Notwithstanding the really remarkable results produced by Leblond, this fatal imperfection mars all the engravings he has left executed in this manner. The copperplates which were printed in colour and carried to such perfection, particularly in England, about the close of the eighteenth century, were printed from one plate, generally executed in stipple, and the various tints or colours carefully rubbed in by the printer, who used for this purpose a sort of stump instead of the ordinary dabber. Whatever artistic harmony in colour might be produced was therefore partially the work, and to the credit of the printer; the printed impressions were in addition generally touched up afterwards, and in some cases almost entirely coloured by hand. Every impression printed in colours necessarily varies; some are really exquisite in their delicacy of tone and assemblage of shades, while others are contemptible in their staring vulgarity. Kirkall engraved an elaborate ornamental form on which to give a receipt to his subscribers for these engravings; one of which, running thus, "Receipt from Sir Hans Sloane of one guinea as part payment for twelve prints in chiaroscuro which he (Kirkall) promises to deliver when finished on payment of one guinea more," can be seen at the British Museum, and will give some idea of the moderate remuneration artists of those days were content to receive for their valuable labour.

The rise of stipple as a separate style took place in the middle of the eighteenth century, and although the coming of Bartolozzi to England gave it so great an impetus, it is necessary to point out that the works of the school which goes by his name by no means show the capabilities of the method. The aim of Bartolozzi and his followers was essentially prettiness; to this all their efforts tended, and for this stipple was a convenient medium. The very printing in red, recently so popular, is barbarous in its ineffectiveness, plates so printed being deprived of a great part of their proper ranges of light and shade. The more serious work in this method was accomplished by other engravers, of whom may be specially mentioned Thomas Gaugain, Anthony Cardon, Caroline Watson, and, later on in the present century, William Walker, who carried the style to the highest point ever reached or likely to be reached. Engraving in stipple—that is, putting dots into the plate in place of lines—was, however, no new invention; from early times line engravers had placed dots in the interstices of their crossed lines to give solidity and greater effect. Ottavio Leoni, a Roman painter, had used the method freely in a set of plates of distinguished artists, which he engraved in the years 1621ndash;5, executing the heads, with the exception of the hair, entirely in stipple; and early in the century French engravers made use of the same means to give effect to many of their flesh textures. The crayon style of engraving introduced by Demarteau, and the feeble English manner known as chalk, which had only a limited reign, are but modifications of the style.

Francesco Bartolozzi, the life-long friend of Cipriani (born in 1725 at Florence), was educated in engraving at Venice by Joseph Wagner, and like Cipriani, who had preceded him, came over to England in 1764. His reputation was already established there; he was appointed engraver to the king with a salary of £300 a year, became one of the first forty full members of the Royal Academy (1768), and was the only engraver admitted to the honour down to the year 1855. Bartolozzi remained in England for thirty-eight years, continuously producing his innumerable and well-known plates; at length, in 1802, seduced by the offer of a house, pension, and a knighthood, he went, at the age of seventy-seven, to Lisbon, where he died in 1815, having reached his ninety-first year, and working at his profession to the last. John Ogborn, Cheesman, Thomas Ryder, Chapman, Agar, T. Burke, and the delightful P. W. Tomkins—who, with the late C. H. Jeens, may be called the miniaturist of engravers—were all followers more or less of his school. An admirable draughtsman and perfect master of the graver, Bartolozzi was in addition able to infuse a certain grace and beauty into the trivial work by which he is best known; but he has done work of a higher stamp, and some of his line engravings, such as "Clytie," the "Death of Dido," the portraits of Lord Thurlow and Martin van Juchen in full armour (worthy of the graver of Pontius or De Jode), make all who care for the art regret that so talented an artist gave the greater part of his time and attention to producing prints which, though graceful and pleasing, charm but for the moment and leave no permanent impression.

This, the Augustan era of English engraving, saw also the rise of the talented and genial Thomas Bewick (born 1753, died 1828), who made the domain of natural history his own, and in addition to executing some interesting copper plates, has by his exquisite wood-cuts after his own drawings entitled England to claim her place amongst the greatest artists in that form of engraving. The Boydells, too, had established their celebrated firm; both were engravers, John in line, and Josiah, his nephew (a pupil of Earlom), in mezzotint. John Boydell was born in 1719, and established himself first (in 1752) at the sign of the "Unicorn," corner of Queen Street, Cheapside, afterwards at 90 Cheapside, and finally took additional premises in Pall Mall for the Shakespeare Gallery. Josiah was born in 1752, succeeded on his uncle's death (1804) to the business, and died in 1817. A great proportion of the best prints of this period will be found to bear the addresses of these famous publishers and engravers.

The last years of the eighteenth and the commencement of the present century witnessed the death of many of the famous engravers already mentioned. It was now that the Birmingham school of line arose, and, urged by the influence of J. M. W. Turner, executed their delicate line engravings after that famous painter. William Radelyffe was the founder of this school, and was followed by his son Edward, Robert Brandard, J. T. Willmore, E. Goodall, R. Wallis, William Miller, and others. Sharp, Anker Smith, James Heath, Earlom, Dickinson, Young, and J. R. Smith still remained for a time, but much of their best work was already done. William Ward, apprenticed to J. R. Smith, his brother James, the noted animal painter, Charles Turner and Samuel William Reynolds had also appeared to carry on and bring to its fullest development the great British school of mezzotint. William Ward, born in 1766, by his series of engravings after George Morland—whose sister he married—has made the names of the painter and engraver almost indissoluble, each having contributed to the immortality of the other. James, the painter and Royal Academician, born in 1769, studied under his brother, with whom he served an apprenticeship of nearly nine years; his plates of "Cornelius the Centurion" after Rembrandt, Sir Joshua's "Mrs. Billington as St. Cecilia," and the studies after nature of heads and feet of ducks, ducklings, geese, and calves, are among the finest works executed in the method. James lived to a great age, dying in 1859 in his ninety-first year, having survived his brother and also a nephew, William James Ward. The last-named was likewise a good mezzotint engraver, but unfortunately died in the prime of life in the year 1840.

Charles Turner was born in the same year as S. W. Reynolds (1773), and survived the latter by more than twenty years; his prints are very numerous, and comprise a great variety of subjects. The large upright mezzotint of Sir Joshua's group of the Marlborough family, with the two younger children in front, one holding a mask, the other shrinking back in fright, is deservedly well known, as is also his fine rendering of "The Shipwreck" after J. M. W. Turner, published in 1807. Other characteristic prints which may be mentioned are "Black and Red Game," after Elmer; "Pheasants," after Barenger; the portraits of "Alexandra, Empress of Russia," after Monier; "Lord Newton," after Raeburn; and a marvellous life-size head of Salvator Rosa's "St. Francis," engraved in 1805. Turner lived till the year 1857, when he died at his house in Warren Street, Fitzroy Square, at the age of eighty-three.

Samuel William Reynolds, one of the most gifted men who ever applied themselves to the engraver's art, studied mezzotint under C. H. Hodges; he commenced his comparatively short career both as painter and engraver, and exhibited for several years at the British Institution. Endowed with singular powers of fascination, Reynolds seems to have attracted and kept fast the friendship of all with whom he became acquainted, irrespective of their particular social surroundings. Samuel Whitbread, the distinguished Member of Parliament, of old Drury Lane Theatre renown, was his intimate and kindest friend; Sheridan and Edmund Kean played at Pope Joan with his daughters, and the very printer of his plates fifty years after Reynolds' death would grow bright when recalling his memory, saying, "He was the prince of engravers." He gave lessons in drawing to the daughters of George III., who wished to make him their equerry, and afterwards an important post with a salary of £900 a year was offered him, but both these offers were refused.

It is from the technical skill and firm daring which Reynolds displayed in his prints, and the intelligent use he made of the means at his command, that his name as an engraver remains pre-eminent; the "Falconer," "Vulture and Snake," "Heron and Spaniel," and "Leopards" after Northcote; the "Duchess of Bedford" after Hoppner; the "regal" whole-length of the unfortunate Princess Charlotte; the large and exquisitely finished etching from Rembrandt's famous picture of "The Mill;" and the "Land Storm"—known also as the "Mail Coach in a Storm"—after George Morland, are but a few of the many prints which show the power and versatility of the engraver. In the last-named print (published 1798), where the resources of mezzotint and etching combined have been used to fullest purpose, the familiar identity of the painter has been almost hidden under the massive effects of light and shade shown in the landscape, where amidst lightning flash and rushing wind the terror-stricken horses are seen dashing madly onward.

When Reynolds went to Paris in 1826, artists there were astonished at his paintings and the effects that he produced. Sixdeniers and Maile studied with him, and several plates bear their combined names; unfortunately both these engravers, excellent as they were as mezzotinters, chiefly engraved after painters whose productions partook of a frivolous and somewhat free character. Reynolds, however, left more permanent marks of his stay in the French capital by executing there the large plates of Géricault's "Wreck of the Medusa," Horace Vernet's "Mazeppa," and the masterly representations of Charlet's characteristic types, the "Village Barber" and the "Rag Picker." In the last two the technical handling is so free that it would almost seem as if the scraper had been used with the same facility as chalk on paper. In reference to this there is a story extant that Reynolds once scraped a large whole-length portrait in a day and a night; the story is true, but it is also true that it is one of his worst plates.

Shortly before his death Reynolds was greatly struck with Constable's picture of "The Lock," and resolved to engrave it at his own cost; writing to Constable on the arrival of the picture, he says:—"I have been before your picture for the last hour. It is no doubt the best of your works true to nature, seen and arranged with a professor's taste and judgment. The execution shows in every part a hand of experience; masterly without rudeness, and complete without littleness; the colouring is sweet, fresh, and healthy; bright not gaudy, but deep and clear. Take it for all in all, since the days of Gainsborough and Wilson no landscape has been painted with so much truth and originality, so much art, so little artifice." But he did not live to fulfil his intention, for while still full of hope and high purpose for the future, Reynolds was suddenly stricken with paralysis, and died at his house in Bayswater in the year 1835. This sudden ending was the cause of his son—likewise named Samuel William—forsaking painting to finish some of his father's plates, and ultimately continuing with success the practice of mezzotint on his own account. Reynolds' daughter Elizabeth, who married the stipple engraver William Walker—though chiefly known by her miniatures and other paintings—also engraved in early life.64 Although there are no authentic records of the pedigree, S. W. Reynolds always asserted his collateral relationship to Sir Joshua Reynolds, and his son often mentioned that his father, when quite a youth, called on Sir Joshua, who, during the conversation that ensued, remarked to Reynolds, "Then you are my cousin."

Other engravers of eminence that flourished during this period are, in line, the Bromleys, John Landseer and his sons, Charles Heath, William B. Cooke and his brother George65 John Burnet (celebrated as painter, engraver, and author), Richard Golding, and John Scott; in stipple, William Bond, Thomas Woolnoth, and James Hopwood; in mezzotint, Henry Dawe, William Say, Henry Meyer, George Clint, and his pupil Thomas Lupton, who, for his introduction of soft steel instead of copper as the medium for mezzotint engraving, received in 1822 the gold Isis medal from the Society of Arts.

The method of stipple was meanwhile slowly dying out, but, as often happens when some particular art seems about to expire, this was the very time when the capabilities of the style were shown in the highest perfection. William Walker, born in Musselburgh in the year 1791, served an apprenticeship to three engravers, Mitchell, Stewart, and Thomas Woolnoth, and choosing stipple as his method of interpretation, in his portraits of Sir Walter Scott, Raeburn, and the Earl of Hopetoun, justified his choice by executing the finest works that were ever accomplished in the style. He astonished the mezzotinters of the period—who told him that, do what he could, he would never make stipple equal mezzotint in colour66—by the amount of force, colour, and effect which he was able to give to these plates. It is needless to say that such work as this could only be accomplished at the expense of intense energy and persevering labour, qualities which were the essential characteristics of the Scotch engraver. Later on, when settled in London, and more particularly after the introduction of steel in place of copper, Walker chiefly practised mezzotint, in which, however, he made use of his previous experience, etching his subject first in stipple before laying the mezzotint ground. His plate of Burns, engraved in mezzotint by himself and Mr. Cousins, owes a great part of its renown to Walker's power of rendering likeness; in regard to this, the painter Alexander Nasmyth remarked, on seeing the finished print, "that all he could say was that it seemed to him a better likeness of the poet than his own picture." This particular quality of fidelity in likeness Walker carried out in all his after historical works; for this purpose no trouble was too much, no labour too severe; the engraving of the "Distinguished Men of Science assembled at the Royal Institution in 1807ndash;8," which occupied a period of six years of unceasing research and labour, is a striking instance. This was practically his last plate. He died at the age of seventy-six, in the year 1867, at his house in Margaret Street, Cavendish Square, and was buried at Brompton Cemetery.

The death of Reynolds in 1835 seems to mark roughly the closing period of English engraving as a great art; two of his most renowned pupils were, however, still in the fulness of power, David Lucas and the present Mr. Samuel Cousins, R.A.67 Of Mr. Cousins, it is sufficient to relate that Reynolds, happening one day to be in the town of Exeter, saw some drawings in a shop window which caught his eye, and on going inside he learnt that they were by a lad of the name of Cousins, which incident led to Reynolds taking the youth to London and keeping him as his apprentice. Mr. Cousins' artistic genius, steady perseverance, and sterling integrity in all that he undertook, brought their full results, as shown in the fine series of mezzotint engravings so widely known and highly appreciated, and his name may indeed be said to close worthily the long line of great British mezzotinters.

David Lucas was born in the year 1802, and had the good fortune to meet in early life with Constable, between whom and Lucas was formed that intimate connection of painter and engraver which in earlier times had led to such great results. Failing Reynolds, Constable had applied to Lucas to be his engraver, and between them was completed the beautiful mezzotint series of English landscape; Constable bore the expense and was ever in counsel with the engraver, going into the minutest details, thinking no trouble too much to produce a good result, down to the printing of the plates, which they often did themselves, Lucas having had a press erected at his house for the purpose. The execution of this series led to Lucas undertaking the large plate of "The Cornfield" at his own risk, and afterwards the companion picture of "The Lock"—referred to before—finally culminating in his production of the superb engraving of Salisbury Cathedral as seen from the meadows, to which Constable himself gave the name of "The Rainbow."68 During all this period constant intercourse and correspondence took place between the painter and engraver. At one time, Constable writes, "Although much admired, Salisbury is still too heavy; the sentiment of the picture is that of solemnity not gaiety, yet it must be bright, clear, alive, fresh, and all the front seen." At another, "The bow is a grand whole, provided it is clear and tender; how I wish I could scratch and tear away with your tools on the steel, but I can't do it, and your quiet way is I know the best and only way." At length comes, "Dear Lucas, the print is a noble and beautiful thing entirely improved and entirely made perfect; the bow is noble, it is startling, unique." So hand-in-hand they worked on, the painter upbearing his helpmate the engraver, each aiding the other, little noticed by the public at the time, but slowly building up an imperishable fame. David Lucas died in 1881 in his eightieth year.

In the middle of the century, inartistic mixture of styles, mechanical means replacing true work, exigencies of copyright, and above all the complete severance of the engraver not only from the painter but also from his only rightful patron the public, had worked its sure result. Some good men survived, such as Lewis, Atkinson, Doo, Robinson, J. H. Watt, R. Graves, J. Posselwhite, Lumb Stocks, Henry Cousins69 W. Giller, J. R. Jackson, and a few others; but no young school had been forming to replace those dying out, and everything presaged the gradual extinction of engraving as one of the great arts. Has this lowest point been reached? Perhaps, as with the beautiful art of miniature painting, which for a time on the advent of photography seemed gone for ever, yet still like some stream was only running on in hidden course underground to appear again and reach daylight, so may it happen with engraving.

Within the last few years two engravers have produced prints worthy of any period of the art, the late C. H. Jeens and the present Mr. W. H. Sherborne. Some of the stipple miniature book illustrations which Jeens executed for Messrs. Macmillan and others, such as the gem medallions of Plato and Socrates, "Love and Death," Woolner's "Beautiful Lady," the portraits of Allan Ramsay, Charles Young, Mr. Ruskin's two Aunts, and above all William Blake, are engraved with the tender feeling and fine touch of the true artist. Mr. Sherborne, born in 1832, probably little known except by the few, originally a chaser and designer for jewellers and pupil of Pietro Gerometti, the Roman cameo engraver and medallist, in 1872, fired by hope and love of the art, forsook his own branch to follow that of engraving. Like all true artists, his mode of execution is his own. Apollo, exhibited at the Royal Academy, 1881, the head of Mr. Seymour Haden, the portraits of Phelps the Chelsea Waterman or Mrs. James Builth, and the interiors of Westminster Abbey, seen at the Painter-Etchers' Exhibition in the summer of 1885, are works that will last, and are good examples of the engraver's powers, causing regret that Mr. Sherborne had not earlier turned his attention to an art the beauty of which he so truly feels. While engraving as a whole was decaying, one branch, that of etching, has been undergoing a revival, and the names of Mr. Seymour Haden, Mr. Philip Hamerton, and Mr. Whistler are world-known. They and their school have confined themselves to producing their own designs, while others, like Mr. David Law, Mr. Macbeth, and the Messrs. Slocombe, also translate the works of painters. But, whether as a vehicle for conveying an original design or translating that of another artist, etching is strictly limited in its powers; it bears the same relation to the full art of engraving as sketching or drawing does to that of perfect painting; suggestive, capable of exhibiting broad effects of light and shade, or indicative of the idiosyncrasy of the etcher, it is, of its very nature, incomplete, and acts but as herald to proclaim the greater results to be obtained by following out the art to its proper goal.

The great impetus which Bewick's genius gave to the art of wood engraving at the commencement of the present century was carried onwards by his distinguished pupils Luke Clennell, Charlton Nesbitt, and William Harvey, the latter of whom, in 1821, cut the large block of the death of Dentatus (15 in. × 11¼ in.) from the picture of the erratic genius B. R. Haydon, under whom he was at that time studying drawing. Robert Branston, John Thompson and his brother Charles70 Jackson, and W. J. Linton, are names of equal renown; in fact, during the first half of the century, England may be said to have been supreme in the art. Gradually, however, the various mechanical processes for facilitating the commercial extension of the art such as electrotyping71 photography, &c., brought here, too, their deteriorating effects, causing the engraver to become less of an artist and more of a mechanic. In delicacy of work and elaboration of detail, American artists now stand first among wood engravers; but they attempt too much with the means at their command, and try to produce upon the comparatively soft material, wood, the delicate fineness of line which can only be realised in perfection on metal. The extreme closeness of the lines, combined with the exigencies of rapid surface printing, dull more or less the minute interstices which ought to show pure white; effect is lost, and, notwithstanding the excellence of the workmanship, the result becomes monotonous and wearying rather than pleasurable to the satiated eye. In etching also America takes high rank; in addition to Mr. Whistler, the names of Messrs. J. Gadsby Chapman, Gifford, Duveneck, F. S. Church, Pennell, Stephen Parrish, and Mr. and Mrs. Moran, are well known in Europe.

In the complete styles of engraving, stipple, line, and mezzotint, although American engravers are little known out of their own country—a large enough field, however, in which to exercise their talents—some good work has also been done; in stipple, by David Edwin, Ion. B. Forrest, Gimbrede, and C. Tiebout; in mezzotint, by Charles Wilson Peale, A. H. Ritchie, and John Sartain, who, after having worked under the direction of William Young Ottley, went from London to America in 1830 at the age of twenty-two; and in line, by Asher Brown Durand; Joseph Andrews; the Smillies; and Charles Burt, who is said to have been the actual engraver of the fine plate of Leonardo's "Last Supper," copied from Morghen's print of the same subject, and bearing the name of A. L. Dick as engraver. The lives of these and others not mentioned were often eventful and picturesque, and would repay study. Some leaving England, Scotland, or Ireland in early life to settle in the land of their adoption, had to struggle with difficulties, often teach themselves, make their own tools, like John Cheney, or like Charles Wilson Peale, turn their hands to whatever duty might present itself. Peale was a captain of volunteers, dentist, lecturer on natural history, saddler, watchmaker, silversmith, painter in oil, crayons, or in miniature on ivory, modeller in clay and wax, engraver in mezzotint, and to crown all, as his son was wont to say, a mild, benevolent, and good man. Many also devoted their talents to bank-note engraving, a branch of the art highly cultivated in the United States, in which the skill of the inventor and mechanic has been united with the grace and genius of the artist. As engravers in this particular style may be specially mentioned W. E. Marshall, J. W. Casilear, M. J. Danforth, Gideon Fairman, and Jacob Perkins, the latter of whom, with Fairman and the ingenious Asa Spencer, came over to England in 1818 to compete for the premium of £20,000 offered by the Bank of England for a bank-note which could not be counterfeited. Although not successful, the Bank allowed them the sum of £5,000 in consideration of their ingenuity and the trouble and expense which they had incurred in the matter. While Asa Spencer is to be credited with inventing the method of applying the geometric lathe72 to engraving the involved patterns on banknotes, Perkins has the honour of introducing the process of transfer by means of steel rollers. The portrait or other design is engraved in the usual manner on a die plate, which is then hardened; a soft steel roller or cylinder is now rolled over the die with great pressure by means of a powerful machine, causing the cylinder to take off in its course the impression of the design in relief; this roller is now hardened in its turn, and by the use of similar means made to impress another soft steel die; by repeating this process, any requisite number of plates can thus be reproduced the exact fac-similes of the original engraved die plate. Owing to the mechanical necessity that only a small surface of the roller should press on the die at a given moment, the diameter of the cylinder requires to be small, so that several of these dies, and consequently of the rollers, will be required to complete the entire plate from which the ultimate printing of the note is effected.

Finally it may be well to conclude this brief account of the British school of engraving by calling attention to the considerations which ought to govern buyers of engravings; buy only that which gives real personal satisfaction, distrust a seller's inducements, in price be ruled by the amount that can be justly afforded, reject alluring thoughts of future money gain (or be prepared to pay the sure penalty—destruction of natural artistic feeling and hope of further cultivation), and ever bear in mind the words of Constable to his engraver: "Tone, tone, my dear Lucas, is the most seductive and inviting quality a picture or print can possess; it is the first thing seen, and like a flower, invites to the examination of the plant itself."73

*****

*** The writer of the Chapter on English Engraving desires to acknowledge the facilities kindly placed at his disposal by Mr. Sidney Colvin, Keeper of Prints and Drawings at the British Museum, and to express his recognition of the valuable aid afforded him by Mr. F. M. O'Donoghue, of the same department.


CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE

OF THE MORE IMPORTANT ENGRAVERS BELONGING TO THE BRITISH SCHOOL OF ENGRAVING.

Foreign Engravers practising in England are marked with an asterisk.

b. stands for born; d., died; fl., flourished; c., about.

16th Cent.
Raynalde, Thomas. Published in 1540 a book called "The Birth of Mankind," illustrated by copperplate engravings.
Geminus, Thomas. Published in 1545 a translation of "Vesalius' Anatomy," written and illustrated with copperplates engraved by himself.
*Hogenberg, Francis. Engraved in line a portrait of Queen Mary I. of England, bearing date 1555. (There are doubts as to the correctness of this date.)
*Hogenberg, Remigius.
(Brother of above.)
Engraved in line portrait of Matthew Parker, Archbishop of Canterbury, bearing date 1573.
Rogers, William. b. London c. 1545. Engraved in line a fine whole-length portrait of Queen Elizabeth, afterwards republished and reduced in size.
17th Cent.
*De Passe, Crispin. b. Utrecht c. 1560. Line. Engraved and drew from life.
*De Passe, Magdalen.
(Daughter of above.)
b. Utrecht 1583. Line.
*De Passe, William.
(Son of above.)
b. Utrecht c. 1590; fl. 1620ndash;27. Line.
*De Passe, Simon.
(Son of above.)
b. Utrecht 1591; d. c. 1644. Line. His earliest work in England dated 1613.
Delaram, Francis. fl. c. 1620. Line.
Elstracke, Reginald. fl. c. 1620. Line.
Peake, Sir Robert. b. c. 1592; d. 1645. Line. Also painted portraits in miniature. Master of engraver Faithorne and painter Dobson.
*Hollar, Wenceslaus. b. Prague 1607; d. London 1677. Etcher, finishing, when necessary, with fine graver.
*Lombart, Peter. b. Paris 1612; came to England c. 1653, remaining for considerable number of years; d. Paris. Line. Engraved series of twelve portraits called "The Countesses."
Faithorne, William.
(Pupil of Sir Robert Peake.)
b. London 1616; d. London 1691. Line.
*Vanderbank, Peter.
(Pupil of De Poilly.) Line.
b. Paris; of Dutch extraction; came to England c. 1674; d. Bradfield 1697.
Barlow, Francis. b. Lincolnshire 1626; d. London 1702. Etcher, line engraver, and animal painter.
Gaywood, Robert.
(Pupil of Hollar.)
b. c. 1630; d. c. 1711. Etcher and line engraver, chiefly of animal subjects.
*Loggan, David.
(Pupil of Simon de Passe.)
b. Dantzic c. 1630; d. London 1693. Line. Portrait and architectural engraver and painter.
Rupert, Prince. b. 1619; d. 1682. Introduced mezzotint into England, and engraved some fine prints in the method, which were probably executed abroad.
Sherwin, William. b. c. 1650; d. c. 1714. Engraved portrait of Charles II. 1669, the earliest dated print in mezzotint authentically engraved in England.
Oliver, John.
(Nephew and pupil of Peter Oliver, miniature painter and etcher.)
b. 1616; d. 1701. Glass painter; also engraved in mezzotint.
Place, Francis. b. c. 1640; d. 1728. Mezzotint, line, etching.
Tompson, Richard.     fl. 1670. A good many early mezzotint prints bear these two names, but only as publishers (excudit not sculpsit), and there is great doubt if any were actually engraved by them. Browne wrote the "Ars Pictoria" in 1669, in which "The Manner or Way of Mezo Tinto" is described; published by himself, Tompson, and another.
Browne, Alexander.
*Blootelingh, Abraham.
(Pupil of Cornelius Visscher.)
b. Amsterdam 1634; d. c. 1695. Line and mezzotint. Came to England for a few years 1673.
*Valck, Gerard.
(Pupil of Blootelingh.)
b. Amsterdam c. 1626; d. c. 1720. Mezzotint and line. Accompanied Blootelingh to England, not leaving until after 1680.
White, Robert.
(Pupil of David Loggan.)
b. London 1645; d. London 1704. Line. Portrait draughtsman from life.
*Vandervaart, John. b. Haarlem 1647; d. London 1721. Mezzotinter and painter. Came to England 1674.
*Van Somer, Paul.
(Pupil of John Van Somer, probably his brother.)
b. Amsterdam 1649; d. London 1694. Mezzotint.
Faithorne, William, junr.
(Son of William Faithorne.)
b. London 1656; d. London 1686. Mezzotint.
Luttrell, E.
(Said to have learnt method of mezzotint from Blois, ground layer to Blootelingh.)
b. Dublin c. 1650; d. c. 1710. Mezzotinter and crayon portraitist.
Beckett, Isaac.
(Attracted by Luttrell's works, learnt the method of mezzotint from Lloyd, a printseller, who is said to have obtained the secret from Blois, ground layer to Blootelingh.)
b. Kent 1653; d. 1719. Mezzotint. Prints all dated between 1681ndash;88.
Smith, John.
(Pupil of Beckett and Vandervaart.)
b. Daventry 1652; d. Northampton 1742. Mezzotint.
Williams, R. b. Wales. Mezzotint. Prints dated c. 1680 to 1704.
*Dorigny, Sir Nicholas. b. Paris 1657; d. Paris 1746. Line. Settled in London 1711ndash;24. Knighted by George I. for his set of Raphael's cartoons.
Lens, Bernard. b. London 1659; d. 1725. Mezzotint.
*Gribelin, Simon. b. Blois 1661; d. England 1733. Line. Came to England 1680; engraved first complete set of Raphael's cartoons.
Lumley, George.
(Friend of Francis Place.)
b. York latter part of 17th century. Mezzotint.
White, George.
(Son and pupil of Robert White.).
b. 1671; d. 1731ndash;2. Mezzotint. Introduced slight etching into the method. Engraved also in line, and painted portraits
18th Cent.
*Simon, John (or Jean). b. Normandy 1675; d. London c. 1755. First engraved in line, then came to England and devoted himself to mezzotint.
Vertue, George. b. London 1684; d. London 1756. Line; antiquary, wrote notes on the history of arts and artists in England. Manuscripts now in the British Museum.
*Van Bleeck, Peter. b. Flanders; d. 1764. Came to England 1723 Mezzotint.
*Faber, John, sen. b. Holland; d. Bristol 1721. Mezzotint; also miniature painter. Came to England in 1687 with his son.
*Faber, John, jun.
(Son and pupil of above.)
b. Holland 1684; d. London 1746. Mezzotint. Amongst others, engraved Kit Cat Club and Hampton Court Beauties.
Hogarth, William.
(First apprenticed to silversmith.)
b. St. Bees, Durham, 1697; d. London 1764. Line engraver and painter.
Sullivan, Luke. b. co. Louth, Ireland, 1705; d. London 1771. Line. Assistant to Hogarth, and engraved some of his pictures.
*Baron, Bernard.
(Pupil of Tardieu, the French engraver.)
b. Paris c. 1700; d. London 1762. Line. Came to England in 1712. Employed by Hogarth.
Worlidge, Thomas. b. 1700; d. Hammersmith 1766. Etcher and portrait painter. Chiefly resided at Bath.
Bickham, George. d. 1769. Line and etching, draughtsman. Published "The Universal Penman;" father of George, also an engraver and draughtsman.
*Ravenet, François Simon, A.E.
(Pupil of Le Bas.)
b. Paris 1706; d. Hampstead Road 1774. Line. Came to England a little before 1745, and settled in London.
Frye, Thomas. b. near Dublin 1710; d. London 1760. Mezzotinter and portrait painter, chiefly lifesize.
Brooks, John. b. Ireland; d. London. Line and mezzotint. Master of McArdell and R. Houston. Left Dublin c. 1747, and set up a china manufactory at Battersea.
McArdell, James.
(Pupil of John Brooks, Dublin.)
b. Dublin c. 1729; d. London 1765. Mezzotint. First made use of deep etching to give effect to the method.
*Canot, Peter Charles, A.E. b. France 1710; d. London 1777. Line; chiefly sea views. Came to England 1740, where he remained for the rest of his life.
Chatelaine, John Baptiste Claude. b. London 1710; d. London 1771. Line and draughtsman. Of French Protestant parentage. Master of Vivares, for whom also he worked later on.
*Vivares, Francis.
(Pupil of Chatelaine.)
b. France 1709; d. London 1780. Line; landscape engraver. Came to London at the age of eighteen.
Tinney, John. d. 1761. Practised in London 1740ndash;50, in line and mezzotint; chiefly known as master of Woollett, Anthony Walker, and John Browne.
Major, Thomas, A.E. b. 1720; d. London 1799. Line. First Associate engraver of the Royal Academy.
Cooper, Richard. b. Yorkshire; d. Edinburgh 1764. Line and mezzotint. Practised in Edinburgh in 1730, and was the master of Strange.
Strange, Sir Robert.
(Pupil of Richard Cooper, of Edinburgh.)
b. Pomona, Orkney, 1721; d. London 1792. Line.
Houston, Richard.
(Pupil of John Brooks, of Dublin.)
b. Ireland 1721; d. London 1775. Mezzotint.
Baillie, William, Captain. b. Ireland 1723; d. 1810. Etching and mezzotint. Came to London 1741. Some years in the army.
*Bartolozzi, Francis, R.A.
(Pupil of Joseph Wagner, of Venice.)
b. Florence 1725; d. Lisbon 1815. Stipple and line. Came to England 1764, remaining here till 1802.
Ogborne, John.
(Pupil of Bartolozzi.)
b. London c. 1725; d. c. 1795. Stipple and line.
Walker, Anthony.
(Pupil of Tinney.)
b. Salisbury 1726; d. London 1765. Line and etching.
Walker, William.
(Pupil of his brother Anthony.)
b. Thirsk 1729; d. Clerkenwell 1793. Line; introduced the process of rebiting into the practice of etching.
*Cunego, Domenico. b. Verona 1727; d. Rome 1794. Line. Came to England and engraved some plates for the Boydells.
Greenwood, John. b. Boston, America, 1729; d. Margate 1792. Mezzotint, etching, and painter. Afterwards became an auctioneer.
Spilsbury, John. b. 1730; d. London 1795. Mezzotint. Portrait painter. Gained premiums for mezzotint 1761 and 1763 from Society of Arts; also printseller.
Dawe, Philip. d. c. 1802. Mezzotint and painter, said to have worked under Hogarth. Was a pupil of the painter Henry Morland.
Basire, James.
(Pupil of Richd. Dalton, a draughtsman and engraver of moderate note.)
b. 1730; d. London 1802. Line. His father Isaac, his son James, and his grandson James, were also engravers.
Taylor, Isaac. b. Worcester 1730; d. 1807. Line. His son Isaac was also an engraver.
Fisher, Edward. b. Ireland 1730; d. London c. 1785. Mezzotint.
Finlayson, John. b. c. 1730; d. c. 1776. Mezzotint. Resided in London. Gained premiums from Society of Arts 1764 and 1773.
*Haid, Johann Gottfried.
(Pupil of his father, J. Jacob Haid.)
b. Wurtemburg 1730; d. 1776. Mezzotint. Came to England when young, and worked for Boydell, afterwards returning to Germany. His father, Johann Jacob, and his brother, Johann Elias, were also good mezzotinters.
*Jacobe, Johann. b. Vienna 1733; d. 1797. Came to London to learn mezzotint, engraved some fine plates, 1779ndash;80, and then returned to Vienna.
Pether, William.
(Pupil of Thomas Frye.)
b. Carlisle 1731; d. 1821. Mezzotint. Painter in oil and miniature draughtsman.
Woollett, William.
(Pupil of Tinney.)
b. Maidstone 1735; d. London 1785. Line.
Watts, John. Mezzotint. Engraved in London 1770ndash;86; also a printseller.
Brookshaw, Richard. b. 1736; d. c. 1804. Mezzotint. Went to Paris about 1772, where his works were greatly esteemed.
Purcell, Richard.
(Pupil of John Brooks.) Also worked under the names of C. Corbutt and (probably) H. Fowler.
b. Dublin c. 1736; d. London c. 1766. Mezzotint. Came to London c. 1755.
Phillips, Charles. b. 1737. Mezzotint. Worked chiefly after the old masters.
Ryland, William Wynne.
(Pupil of Ravenet.)
b. London 1738; d. London 1783. Line and stipple; also a printseller. Visited Paris c. 1760, and is said to have studied under Le Bas. Was hanged for forgery.
Green, Valentine, A.E. b. near Birmingham 1739; d. London 1813. Mezzotint. Engraved over twenty plates from Düsseldorf Gallery.
Hall, John.
(Pupil of Ravenet.)
b. near Colchester 1739; d. London 1797. Line.
Blackmore, Thomas. b. London c. 1740; d. c. 1780. Mezzotint. Engravings bear date about 1769ndash;71.
Dixon, John. b. Dublin c. 1740; d. early 19th century. Mezzotint. Practised in London, studied in Dublin under the painter F. West, a draughtsman of great power.
Laurie, Robert. b. London 1740; d. c. 1804. Mezzotint; also printseller. Gained premium Society of Arts 1771, and one in 1776 for facilitating printing by mezzotint in colours. Spells his name Lowry, Lowery, Lowrie, Lawrie, and finally Laurie.
Okey, Samuel. fl. 1765ndash;70. Mezzotint. Awarded premiums by Society of Arts in 1765 and 1767. Went to America in 1771, and settled at Rhode Island.
Watson, James. b. Ireland 1740; d. London 1790. Mezzotint. Father of Caroline Watson.
Browne, John, A.E.
(Pupil of Tinney and Woollett.)
b. Essex 1741; d. Walworth 1801. Line. Landscape engraver.
Watson, Thomas.
(Apprenticed to engraver on plate.)
b. London 1743; d. Bristol 1781. Mezzotint and stipple. Engraved "Windsor Beauties" after Lely; has been stated to be the brother of James W., but no relation; partner with Dickinson as printseller.
*Tassaert, Philip J. b. Antwerp; d. London 1803. Mezzotint, also line. Came to England very young. Assistant to T. Hudson the painter.
Byrne, William.
(Pupil of his uncle, a heraldic engraver, then of Aliamet and of Wille, at Paris.)
b. London 1743; d. London 1805. Line. Landscape engraver. His son John and daughters Letitia and Elizabeth also engraved, and helped him in his plates.
Earlom, Richard. b. London 1743; d. London 1822. Mezzotint and stipple. Used etching with vigorous effect. Engraved a few plates under name of H. Birche; some time a pupil of Cipriani.
Dunkarton, Robert.
(Pupil of Pether.)
b. London 1744; d. early part of 19th century. Mezzotint. Engravings bear dates 1770ndash;1811.
Cook, Thomas.
(Pupil of Ravenet.)
b. c. 1744; d. c. 1818. Line. Engraved amongst others Hogarth's works under title "Hogarth Restored."
Dickinson, William. b. London 1746; d. Paris 1823. Mezzotint and stipple. Awarded premium Society of Arts 1767. For some time partner with Thomas Watson as printseller.
Townley, Charles. b. London 1746. Mezzotint and stipple, also miniature painter. Worked at Berlin 1786ndash;92, then returned to London.
Ryder, Thomas.
(Pupil of Basire.)
b. 1746; d. 1810. Stipple. His son Thomas also engraved.
Walker, James.
(Pupil of Val. Green.)
b. 1748; d. London 1808. Mezzotint. In 1784 went to St. Petersburg, became engraver to Empress of Russia, and returned to England in 1802.
Murphy, John b. Ireland 1748; d after 1820. Mezzotint and stipple.
*Gaugain, Thomas.
(Pupil of Houston.)
b. Abbeville 1748; d. beginning 19th century. Stipple. Came very young to London.
Holloway, Thomas b. London 1748; d. 1727. Line. Known chiefly from his series of Raphael's cartoons.
Collyer, Joseph, A.E.
(Pupil of Anthony Walker.)
b. London 1748; d. 1827. Line and stipple.
Sharp, William.
(Pupil of Barak Longmate, engraver on plate.)
b. London 1749; d. Chiswick 1824. Line.
Sherwin, John Keyse.
(Pupil of Bartolozzi.)
b. Sussex 1749; d. London 1790. Line, stipple, and painter.
Burke, Thomas.
(Pupil of Dixon.)
b. Dublin; d. London 1815. Stipple and mezzotint.
Strutt, Joseph.
(Pupil of W. Wynne Ryland.)
b. Essex 1749; d. London 1802. Stipple. Author of "Dictionary of Engravers," "Sports and Pastimes of the English," &c.
Doughty, William b. York; d. Lisbon 1782. Mezzotinter, also portrait painter. Engravings mostly dated 1779. Was a pupil of Sir Joshua Reynolds. Sailed for Bengal 1780, but, captured by French and Spanish squadrons, was taken instead to Lisbon.
Hudson, Henry b. London; d. abroad; fl. 1782ndash;92. Mezzotint.
Dean, John.
(Pupil of Valentine Green.)
b. c. 1750; d. London 1798. Mezzotint. Prints dated 1776ndash;89 at three addresses in Soho, at the last of which a fire destroyed nearly all his plates and stock.
Jones, John d. 1797. Mezzotint and stipple. Father of George Jones (b. 1786), R.A., the painter.
Parker, James.
(Pupil of Basire.)
b. 1750; d. London 1805. Line. Joined Willaim Blake in keeping a print shop in 1784.
Simon, Peter J. b. c. 1750; d. c. 1810. Stipple.
*Facius, George Sigmund.    Brothers. b. Ratisbon c. 1750. Stipple. Came to London in 1766 at the request of Boydell.
*Facius, John Gottlieb.
Morris, Thomas.
(Pupil of Woollett.)
b. c. 1750; fl. 1795. Line. Engraved Views of St. Paul's and the Monument.
Middiman, Samuel.
(Pupil of Byrne.)
b. 1750; d. London 1831. Line. Landscape engraver.
Saunders, J. fl. 1772ndash;74. Mezzotint.
*Marchi, Giuseppe Filippo Liberati. b. Rome 1752; d. London 1808. Mezzotint. Brought to England 1769 by Sir J. Reynolds, who employed him as an assistant.
Smith, John Raphael. b. Derby 1752; d. Doncaster 1812. Mezzotint and stipple. Painter in miniature and crayons and printseller. Father of Emma Smith the engraver.
Bewick, Thomas.
(Pupil of Beilby, an engraver at Newcastle.)
b. Northumberland 1753; d. Gateshead 1828. Wood engraver; also copperplate. His brother John was likewise a wood engraver.
Nutter, William.
(Pupil of J. R. Smith.)
b. 1754; d. London 1802. Stipple.
Young, John.
(Pupil of J. R. Smith.)
b. 1755; d. London 1825. Mezzotint. Published catalogues with etchings of the Grosvenor (1820), Leigh Court (1822), Angerstein (1823), and Stafford (1826) Galleries.
Grozer, Joseph. fl. 1786ndash;97. Mezzotint.
Pollard, Robert.
(Pupil of a silversmith.)
b. Newcastle-on-Tyne 1755; d. 1838. Etching, aquatint, and painter; last surviving member of Incorporated Society of Artists; in 1836 gave over to Royal Academy the papers of the Society.
Legat, Francis. b. Scotland 1755; d. London 1869. Line. Studied under Alex. Runciman, the Edinburgh painter.
Gillray, James.
(Pupil of heraldic engraver.)
b. Lanarkshire 1720; d. London 1815. Etcher and line. Caricaturist.
Heath, James, A.E.
(Pupil of Collyer.)
b. London 1757; d. London 1834. Line. Father of Charles Heath.
Blake, William.
(Pupil of Basire.) 2nd of the name.
b. Broad Street, Golden Square, London, 1757; d. Fountain Court, Strand; buried Bunhill Fields, 1827. Line, stipple, and etching. Poet and painter.
Haward, Francis, A.E. b. 1759; d. London c. 1797. Mezzotint and stipple.
Thew, Robert. b. Yorkshire 1758; d. Herts 1802. Stipple.
Smith, Anker, A.E.
(Pupil of James Taylor, who was brother and uncle respectively of the two Isaac Taylors, engravers of some note.)
b. London 1759; d. London 1819. Line.
Sheppeard, George. b. c. 1760; fl. 1794. Mezzotint and stipple.
Tomkins, P. W.
(Pupil of Bartolozzi.)
b. London 1760; d. 1840. Stipple. Designer.
Park, Thomas. b. 1760; d. Hampstead 1835. Mezzotint. Author.
Cheeseman, Thomas.
(Pupil of Bartolozzi.)
b. 1760; d. after 1820. Stipple. Draughtsman.
Watson, Caroline.
(Daughter of James Watson.)
b. London 1760; d. Pimlico 1814. Stipple.
Judkins, Elizabeth.
(Said to be pupil of James Watson.)
fl. 1772ndash;75. Mezzotint. Engraved "Mrs. Abingdon" and "Careful Shepherdess," amongst others, after Sir J. Reynolds.
Keating, George.
(Pupil of William Dickinson.)
b. Ireland 1762; fl. London 1784ndash;97. Mezzotint. Stipple.
*Ramberg, John Henry. b. Hanover 1763; d. c. 1840. Aquatint, etching, stipple. Painter. Came early in life to England, but is said to have died at Hanover.
*Schiavonetti, Luigi. b. Bassano 1765; d. Brompton 1810. Line, stipple. Draughtsman. Came to England in 1790, and joined Bartolozzi.
Knight, Charles. fl. latter part of 18th century. Stipple.
Summerfield, John.
(Pupil of Bartolozzi.)
d. Buckinghamshire 1817. Line.
Skelton, William.
(Pupil of Basire and Sharp.)
b. London 1763; d. Pimlico 1848. Line.
Nugent, Thomas. b. Drogheda; fl. end of 18th century. Stipple.
Dupont, Gainsborough. b. 1767; d. London 1797. Mezzotint. Painter. Nephew and pupil of Thomas Gainsborough.
Bromley, William, A.E.
(Pupil of Wooding, a line engraver in London.)
b. Isle of Wight 1769; d. 1842. Line. Father of John Charles, and James Bromley, the mezzotint engravers.
Warren, Charles. b. London 1767; d. Wandsworth 1823. Line. Perfected a process of engraving on steel plates tried by Raimbach. Awarded gold medal Society of Arts.
Ward, William, A.E.
(Pupil of J. R. Smith.)
b. London 1766; d. London 1826. Mezzotint. Married sister of George Morland, father of William Ward, junior.
19th Cent.
Ward, James, R.A.
(Nine years pupil of his brother William, J. R. Smith.)
b. London 1769; d. 1855. Mezzotint. Animal painter.
Landseer, John, A.E.
(Pupil of William Byrne.)
b. Lincoln 1769; d. 1852. Line. Father of the painters Charles and Sir Edwin, R.A.'s, and of the engraver Thomas.
Say, William.
(Pupil of James Ward.)
b. near Norwich 1768; d. London 1834. Mezzotint. Engraved first successful mezzotint on steel.
Cooper, Robert. fl. early part of 19th century. Stipple.
Hodges, Charles Howard. b. England; d. Amsterdam 1837. Mezzotint and painter. Went to Holland c. 1794.
*Cardon, Anthony.
(Pupil of Schiavonetti.)
b. Brussels 1773; d. London 1813. Stipple. Came to England in 1790.
Godby, James. fl. beginning 19th century. Stipple.
Smith, Benjamin.
(Pupil of Bartolozzi.)
d. London 1833. Stipple.
Clint, George, A.R.A. b. London 1770; d. Kensington 1854. Mezzotint; also portrait and miniature painter.
Reynolds, Samuel Wm.
(Pupil of Hodges.)
b. 1773; d. Bayswater 1835. Mezzotint, portrait, and water-colour painter. Father of Elizabeth, mezzotint engraver and miniature painter, and Samuel William, mezzotint engraver and portrait painter.
Turner, Charles, A.E. b. Woodstock 1773; d. London 1857. Mezzotint and stipple.
Scott, John.
(Pupil of Pollard.)
b. Newcastle-on-Tyne 1774; d. Chelsea 1828. Line, animal engraver.
Scriven, Edward.
(Pupil of Thew.)
b. Alcester 1775; d. London 1841. Stipple.
Raimbach, Abraham.
(Pupil of J. Hall.)
b. London 1776; d. Greenwich 1843. Line.
Noble, George. fl. beginning of 19th century. Line.
Engleheart, Francis.
(Pupil of Collyer.)
b. London 1775; d. 1849. Line.
Nesbitt, Charlton.
(Pupil of Beilby and Bewick.)
b. near Durham 1775; d. Brompton 1838. Wood engraver.
Branston, Robert.
(Pupil of his father, a copperplate engraver.)
b. Lynn 1778; d. Brompton 1827. Wood engraver.
Clennell, Luke.
(Pupil of Bewick.)
b. near Morpeth 1781; d. Newcastle-on-Tyne 1840. Wood engraver, water-colour, and miniature painter.
Cooke, William Bernard.
(Pupil of Angus, an engraver in line of some note.)
b. 1778; d. 1855. Line. Brother of George and uncle of E. W. Cooke, R.A.
Cooke, George.
(Pupil of Basire.)
b. London 1781; d. Barnes 1834. Line. Brother of Wm. Bernard, and father of E. W. Cooke, R.A.
Lewis, Frederick Christian. b. London 1779; d. Enfield 1856. Stipple or chalk; water-colour painter. Father of J. F. Lewis, R.A., and C. G. Lewis the engraver.
Dawe, George, R.A.
(Son and pupil of Philip Dawe.)
b. London 1781; d. 1829. Mezzotint; painter. Brother of Henry. Painted in Russia for the Emperor 1819ndash;28.
Dawe, Henry.
(Son and pupil of Philip Dawe.)
b. London 1790; d. Windsor 1845. Mezzotint and painter.
Pye, John.
(Pupil of James Heath.)
b. Birmingham 1782; d. London 1874. Line and stipple. Landscape engraver.
Wedgwood, John Taylor. b. 1783; d. London 1856. Line.
Meyer, Henry.
(Pupil of Bartolozzi.)
b. London c. 1783; d. 1847. Mezzotint; and stipple. Nephew of J. Hoppner, R.A.
Le Keux, John    Brothers. b. London 1787; d. 1868. Line, architectural, and landscape engravers.
Le Keux, Henry b. London 1783; d. 1846.
(Pupils of Basire.)
Armstrong, Cosmo. fl. early part of 19th century. Line.
Radclyffe, William. b. Birmingham 1782; d. Birmingham 1855. Line, landscape engraver; practised in Birmingham all his life. Father of Edward, landscape engraver.
Burnet, John, F.R.S. b. Edinburgh 1784; d. Stoke Newington 1868. Line and mezzotint. Painter and author.
Heath, Charles.
(Son of James Heath.)
b. 1785; d. 1848. Line; excelled in small plates.
Golding, Richard.
(Pupil of J. Parker.)
b. London 1785; d. Lambeth 1865. Line.
Woolnoth, Thomas. b. 1785; d. c. 1854. Stipple and line. Small theatrical portraits and architectural views.
Thompson, John.
(Pupil of Branston.)
b. London 1785; d. London 1866. Wood engraver. Brother of Charles and Charles Thurston.
Romney, John. b. 1786; d. Chester 1863. Line.
Thompson, Charles.
(Pupil of Bewick and Branston.)
b. London 1791; d. near Paris 1843. Wood engraver; better known in Paris, where he went in 1816, and introduced the practice of cutting out the end of the wood, then unknown abroad.
Bond, William. fl. beginning of 19th century. Stipple.
Chapman, J.
(Pupil of Bartolozzi.)
fl. beginning of 19th century. Stipple.
Webb, J. b. c. 1790; d. 1832. Line. Engraver of animals.
Finden, Wm.    Brothers. b. 1792; d. 1857. Stipple and line. Landscape and book illustrators.
Finden, E. F. b. 1788; d. 1852.
(Pupils of J. Mitan, an engraver of some note.)
Walker, William.
(Pupil of Thomas Woolnoth, and Mitchell and Stewart, two engravers of moderate note.)
b. Midlothian 1791; d. London 1867. Stipple and mezzotint. Married Elizabeth, daughter of S. W. Reynolds.
Lupton, Thomas Goff.
(Pupil of Clint.)
b. Clerkenwell 1791; d. 1873. Mezzotint. Established the use of steel in place of copper in mezzo engraving. Received for this gold Isis medal from Society of Arts in 1822.
Linnell, John. b. 1792; d. c. 1880. Mezzotint; painter.
Cruikshank, George.
(Son of Isaac, also caricaturist and engraver.)
b. London 1792; d. London 1878. Etcher and caricaturist.
Worthington, Wm. H. b. c. 1795; d. 1826. Line. Worked in London.
Goodall, Edward. b. Leeds 1795; d. London 1870. Line. Engraved after J. M. W. Turner, through whose influence he became an engraver. Was self-taught.
Landseer, Thomas, A.E.
(Son and pupil of John Landseer, A.E.)
b. c. 1795; d. 1880. Line. Brother of Sir Edwin.
Hopwood, James.
(Son of James; also an engraver, self-taught, but helped by Heath.)
b. 1795. Stipple.
Rolls, Charles. fl. early part of 19th century. Line.
Bromley, John Charles.
(Son of Wm. Bromley, A.E.)
b. Chelsea 1795; d. 1839. Mezzzotint. His son Frederick was also an engraver.
Harvey, William.
(Pupil of Thomas Bewick and B. R. Haydon.)
b. Newcastle-on-Tyne 1796; d. Richmond 1866. Wood engraver and designer. Cut one of the largest English wood-cuts.
Robinson, John. Henry, R.A.
(Pupil of James Heath.)
b. Bolton 1796; d. Petworth 1871. Line.
Graves, Robert, A.E.
(Pupil of John Romney.)
b. London 1798; d. Highgate 1873. Line.
Watt, James Henry.
(Pupil of Charles Heath.)
b. London 1799; d. 1867. Line.
Bromley, James.
(Son of William Bromley, A.E.)
b. 1800; d. 1838. Mezzotint.
Ward, William, junior.
(Son of William Ward, A.E.)
b. c. 1800; d. 1840. Mezzotint.
Willmore, James Tibbetts, A.E.
(Seven years pupil of W. Radclyffe, and three years of C. Heath.)
b. Erdington, Staffordshire, 1800; d. London 1863. Line. Engraved after J. M. W. Turner.
Raddon, W. fl. 1830. Line.
Hodgetts, J. fl. 1830. Mezzotint.
Jackson, John.
(Pupil of Bewick and Harvey.)
b. Ovingham 1801; d. 1848. Wood engraver. Published with Chatto "A Treatise on Wood Engraving," 1838.
Gibbon, Benjamin Phelps.
(Pupil of J. H. Robinson and Scriven).
b. 1802; d. London 1851. Line.
Shenton, Henry Chawner.
(Pupil of Charles Warren.)
b. Winchester 1803; d. London 1866. Line.
Giller, W. fl. 1835. Mezzotint.
Brandard, Robert.
(Pupil of E. Goodall.)
b. Birmingham 1805; d. 1852. Line, landscape engraver. Came to London 1824. Engraved after J. M. W. Turner.
Lewis, Charles George. b. 1807; d. 1880. Line, etching.
Lucas, John.
(Pupil of S. W. Reynolds.)
b. London 1807; d. London 1874. Mezzotint; portrait painter.
Radclyffe, Edward.
(Son and pupil of William Radclyffe.)
b. Birmingham 1809; d. London 1863. Line.
Joubert, Jean Ferdinand. b. 1810; d. 1884. Line.
Zobel, George. b. c. 1815; d. London 1881. Mezzotint.
Jeens, Charles Henry. b. 1817; d. 1879. Stipple. Miniature book illustrations.
Jackson, John Richardson.
(Pupil of R. Graves, A.E.)
b. Portsmouth 1819; d. Southsea 1877. Mezzotint and line.
Cousins, Henry.
(Brother of Saml. Cousins, R.A.)
fl. 1840. Mezzotint.
Ward, George Raphael.
(Son of James Ward.)
fl. 1840. Mezzotint.
There are still living three engravers eminently representative of the old schools:--
Doo, George, R.A., F.R.S. b. c. 1800. Line.
Posselwhite, J. Stipple.
Cousins, Samuel, R.A. b. 1801. Mezzotint. The present T. L. Atkinson was a pupil of Cousins.