Monday, December 5, 2016

European Etchings and Engravings, 19th century

Jacques-Louis Perée after Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres
Statue of Nero from Le Musée français
etching, engraving
ca. 1803-09
British Museum

The gigantic expansion of the popular press in the 19th century caused a corresponding expansion of mechanically reproduced illustrations. A mono-culture of advertising was born along with a parallel culture of celebrity-worship. The images featured here represent some of the more traditional printmaking projects of the era, those that remained aligned with earlier ideals. Yet work of this sort was beginning to seem old-fashioned in its own day, even when brand-new.

Ferdinand Gaillard
Académie
1856
engraving
British Museum

George Percy Jacomb-Hood
Portrait of a man
etching
ca. 1872-77
British Museum

George Percy Jacomb-Hood
Half-length figure
etching
ca. 1872-74
British Museum

Joseph Benwell Clark
Alphonse Legros
drypoint
1880
National Portrait Gallery, London

Joseph Benwell Clark
Portrait of a man
1878
etching
British Museum

Joseph Benwell Clark
Model on the studio floor
etching
1878
British Museum

Charles Holroyd
Nymphs by a lake
etching
1894
British Museum

Anonymous
Portrait of Henry Cort
engraving, mezzotint
1856
British Museum

Anonymous
Portrait of Napoleon (unfinished)
etching
19th century
British Museum

Anonymous
Ice skaters
hand-colored etching
ca. 1810
British Museum

Anonymous
H.M. Bal Costumé (Victoria & Albert, center)
hand-colored etching
June 6, 1845
National Portrait Gallery, London

Anonymous
Lord Nelson's Coffin
hand-colored etching
1806
British Museum

Anonymous
Lord Nelson's Funeral Car
hand-colored etching
1806
British Museum