Image of Gallery in South Kensington
Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level E , Case MP, Shelf 30

The First Avenue Hotel, Hove

Etching
ca.1939 (made), 1939 (published)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

John Piper shared his delight in the quirkiness and charm of English seaside buildings with his great friend, the poet and architectural writer John Betjeman. Both were fascinated by old guide-books and by the albums of topographical views that had enjoyed such a vogue in the years around 1780-1820. Experimenting with the old-fashioned aquatint etching process, Piper found a medium which exactly suited his desire to combine abstracted pattern with carefully rendered architectural detail. Remarkably receptive to both the elegance and rackety, decaying charm of Brighton, Piper made a set of twelve plates. They were published in a traditional oblong album format, with descriptions of the subjects by the artist and an introduction by Lord Alfred Douglas. A small number of sets were bound up with the prints individually hand-coloured by Piper himself, his wife Myfanwy and John Betjeman.



Object details

Categories
Object type
Titles
  • The First Avenue Hotel, Hove (assigned by artist)
  • Brighton Aquatints (series title)
Materials and techniques
Etching and aquatint coloured by hand
Brief description
Plate from Brighton Aquatints by John Piper entitled "The First Avenue Hotel, Hove" (1940)
Physical description
Print, etching and aquatint of a Hotel in Hove, Brighton (1940)
Dimensions
  • Height: 19.4cm
  • Width: 27.5cm
  • Height: 254mm (Note: Taken from the departmental circulation registration 1948)
  • Width: 177.8mm (Note: Taken from the departmental circulation registration 1948)
Object history
Plate 1 of twelve from the series 'Brighton Aquatints' by John Piper published by Duckworth in 1939
Subjects depicted
Place depicted
Literary referenceBrighton Aquatints by John Piper
Summary
John Piper shared his delight in the quirkiness and charm of English seaside buildings with his great friend, the poet and architectural writer John Betjeman. Both were fascinated by old guide-books and by the albums of topographical views that had enjoyed such a vogue in the years around 1780-1820. Experimenting with the old-fashioned aquatint etching process, Piper found a medium which exactly suited his desire to combine abstracted pattern with carefully rendered architectural detail. Remarkably receptive to both the elegance and rackety, decaying charm of Brighton, Piper made a set of twelve plates. They were published in a traditional oblong album format, with descriptions of the subjects by the artist and an introduction by Lord Alfred Douglas. A small number of sets were bound up with the prints individually hand-coloured by Piper himself, his wife Myfanwy and John Betjeman.

Associated objects
Bibliographic references
  • Piper, John Aquatints of Brighton London: Duckworth, 1939
  • Taken from the departmental circulation registration 1948
  • Taken from the micromedia pdf catalogue
Collection
Accession number
CIRC.40-1948

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Record createdApril 25, 2006
Record URL
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