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Image of Gallery in South Kensington
Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level F , Case EDUC, Shelf 9, Box D

Print

1960 (made), 1900-1960 (printed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The block from which this print is taken is believed to have been engraved Thomas Bewick (ca. 1753–1828) himself, rather than by someone in his workshop. Bewick was the first artist to exploit fully the potential of wood engraving. In wood engraving the image is usually made on a block of hard wood, typically boxwood, which the engraver works with a burin instead of the knives and gouges used in woodcutting. This makes it possible to produce more delicate effects. Bewick pioneered the white line method, carving some of his design into the block to be ‘read’ as white lines. He combined this with the more usual black line engraving, in which the part of the design not to be printed was cut away leaving the outline and shading of the design in relief. Compare the foliage in the tree (in white line) to the tomb and urn (in black line).


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Wood-engraving
Brief description
Impression taken in 1960 from the woodblock engraved by Thomas Bewick in memory of his friend Solomon Hodgson, ca. 1800.
Physical description
Wood engraving of a tomb in a churchyard
Dimensions
  • Length: 6.67cm
  • Height: 8.57cm
Style
Marks and inscriptions
  • 'Sol. Hodgson obt 4 April 1800 AE 39' (Lettered on the tomb)
  • 'T Bewick Scu.' (Signed)
Gallery label
Bewick was a pioneer of wood engraving. He developed a white-line technique, engraving into the wood to create white strokes and shapes, as well as cutting away the wood to produce black lines, as in traditional woodcut.(August 2019)
Subjects depicted
Summary
The block from which this print is taken is believed to have been engraved Thomas Bewick (ca. 1753–1828) himself, rather than by someone in his workshop. Bewick was the first artist to exploit fully the potential of wood engraving. In wood engraving the image is usually made on a block of hard wood, typically boxwood, which the engraver works with a burin instead of the knives and gouges used in woodcutting. This makes it possible to produce more delicate effects. Bewick pioneered the white line method, carving some of his design into the block to be ‘read’ as white lines. He combined this with the more usual black line engraving, in which the part of the design not to be printed was cut away leaving the outline and shading of the design in relief. Compare the foliage in the tree (in white line) to the tomb and urn (in black line).
Associated object
E.5506-1960 (Original)
Bibliographic reference
Victoria and Albert Museum Department of Prints and Drawings and Department of Paintings Accessions 1960 and 1961 London: HMSO, 1964
Collection
Accession number
E.5506A-1960

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Record createdJune 30, 2009
Record URL
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