Jerusalem thumbnail 1
Jerusalem thumbnail 2
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
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Jerusalem

Print
1804-1820 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

William Blake (1757–1827) was a visionary poet and printmaker who developed the technique of relief etching to print his books of poems. He closely integrated text and image on the same plate. Blake called his etchings ‘illuminated printing’. He worked with his wife, Catherine.
To make a relief etching the artist drew the design in an acid resistant substance so that when the plate was immersed in acid, the drawn areas were protected. When the acid had eaten into the rest of the plate, the lines of the design then stood up in relief. The softer metal zinc was preferred for relief etched plates, rather than copper as used in intaglio etching. Blake made several other innovations in printing his poetic visions. Although he relief-etched the metal plates, he used a roller press usually associated with intaglio processes to achieve more printing pressure. Using both oily inks and water-based paints, he printed the text and the coloured images simultaneously, allowing the inks to run onto the lower areas of the plate to create dynamic background washes.

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Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleJerusalem (series title)
Materials and techniques
Hand coloured relief etching printed in blue
Brief description
Colour relief etching, partially hand-coloured, by William Blake, plate 11 from the 'Jerusalem' series of prints created to accompany the poem of the same name. Great Britain, ca.1804-1820.
Physical description
Hand coloured relief etching, predominately blue in colour, depicting a swan with the suggestion of a female body resting on water, and an angel in flight with fiery coloured wings. The two images are above and below a passage of text from Blake's well-known epic poem, Jerusalem, written in the artist's hand.
Dimensions
  • Height: 39.8cm
  • Width: 28.6cm
Gallery label
Blake did several innovative things to print his ‘illuminated’ poetic visions. He relief-etched the metal plates but used a roller press to achieve more printing pressure. Using both oily inks and water-based paints, he printed the text and coloured images together and allowed the inks to run onto the lower areas of the plate to create dynamic background washes.(August 2019)
Subjects depicted
Literary reference
Summary
William Blake (1757–1827) was a visionary poet and printmaker who developed the technique of relief etching to print his books of poems. He closely integrated text and image on the same plate. Blake called his etchings ‘illuminated printing’. He worked with his wife, Catherine.
To make a relief etching the artist drew the design in an acid resistant substance so that when the plate was immersed in acid, the drawn areas were protected. When the acid had eaten into the rest of the plate, the lines of the design then stood up in relief. The softer metal zinc was preferred for relief etched plates, rather than copper as used in intaglio etching. Blake made several other innovations in printing his poetic visions. Although he relief-etched the metal plates, he used a roller press usually associated with intaglio processes to achieve more printing pressure. Using both oily inks and water-based paints, he printed the text and the coloured images simultaneously, allowing the inks to run onto the lower areas of the plate to create dynamic background washes.
Bibliographic reference
Miller, Elizabeth. Hand Coloured British Prints. London: Published by Trustees of the Victoria and Albert Museum, 1987.
Other number
B.75 - Book Number
Collection
Accession number
E.668-1899

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Record createdJune 30, 2009
Record URL
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