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"engraver" Definitions
  1. a person whose job is to cut words or designs on wood, stone, metal, etc.

1000 Sentences With "engraver"

How to use engraver in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "engraver" and check conjugation/comparative form for "engraver". Mastering all the usages of "engraver" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"I'm so sorry for all this," he said to the engraver.
Rendered by the German engraver Johann Jacob Ridinger, the image is chilling.
Just like that, one could feel the engraver was getting his tools ready.
Visible in both etched and engraved portraits is Paulus Pontius, van Dyck's main engraver.
It took a master engraver more than 0003 hours to create the masterpiece by hand.
In 1801, British writer and engraver Joseph Strutt published a compendium of bizarre medieval pastimes.
One of the latest entries into this space is beamo, a compact, 30W laser cutter and engraver built by Flux — a Taiwan-based team you might remember for raising $1.6 million on Kickstarter with its Flux Delta 3D printer/scanner/engraver back in 2014.
I do this by appropriating those little works via a laser engraver, vinyl cutter, printer, etc.
"Then I will have it faithfully copied by the skilled Franz Hogenberg," the collection's principle engraver.
GoS watches come in walnut boxes made by a woodcarver nearby, and a local engraver customizes them.
Her mother, an engraver, let her skip school to go to the zoo and sketch the animals there.
Then, an engraver carved a series of cherry wood blocks, cutting a different stamp for each ink color.
A talented engraver and colourist in her own right, she had a hand in many of his creations.
In modern times, the man credited for popularizing them is José Guadalupe Posada, a famous late-19th-century engraver.
They encouraged his interest in art, and, when he was 14, he was apprenticed to James Basire, a successful engraver.
From the release: Each of the six aliens is individually modelled and hand-sculpted in white gold by engraver Olivier Kuhn.
A painter and engraver, Cole became a founder of the Hudson River School, one of the country's first great American art movements.
The detail is so fine that it seems the engraver would have needed a magnifying glass, as would admirers of his work.
Chris Wormell, a professional wood engraver who was asked to design a more fierce lion, said fans seemed to like his version.
The most bizarre procession in Beltrame's collection, however, is found in an early-16th-century work by the renowned Renaissance engraver Agostino Veneziano.
In 1801, the British engraver and writer Joseph Strutt published a compendium to showcase some of the bizarre, bygone pastimes of his country.
She brought me to the workshop of Italo Varisco, a renowned crystal maker and engraver, Treviso's answer to Venice's Murano island of glass blowers.
" Joaquin Jimenez, the mint's creative director and its principal engraver, said, "Collaborations are a chance for us to confront métiers we rarely come across.
The first attributed illustration of Hamlet with a skull dates back to the 18th-century engraver John Hall, but that was just the start.
The work is a portrait of Leopold Löwenstam, an engraver and close friend of Alma-Tadema who created numerous etchings of the artist's work.
Hardware startup Glowforge, which makes a desktop laser cutter and engraver for home or office use, has finally opened up sales to the general public.
"They call it the end of the world—and for vice it is truly so," wrote an exiled London engraver in the early 19303th century.
Botanical artists of the Enlightenment era, like German engraver Jacob Sturm, produced even more sophisticated versions of the plant that separately label its constituent parts.
Skaryna was an excellent engraver, too: his vivid woodcuts, featuring Biblical figures in traditional Belarusian costume, meant that illiterate citizens could begin to grasp religious ideas.
It took engraver Olivier Kuhn 34 hours to carve each little alien out of white gold, with the arms and necks finer than grains of sand.
Cuevas' brooding figures graced exhibits from Paris to New York during a career as a painter, sculptor, writer, draftsman and engraver that spanned more than seven decades.
Now, a company that makes a desktop laser cutter and engraver for home or office use, Glowforge, has raised $22 million to start mass production of its devices.
The 18 illustrations that show Death as a bony baby, a bride, a triumphant ruler, and many other roles, are the creations of Mexican engraver Francisco Agüera Bustamante.
His initial model for printmaking was the 16th-century engraver Lucas van Leyden, some of whose compositions, blending classical poise and real-world detail, he repeated, with tweaks.
There will be a resident master engraver should you fancy adding your initials or another design (may we suggest the N.Y.C. skyline?) to a sterling silver bangle ($425).
Although she works primarily as a glass artist, Hambrick says the air-powered engraver she uses on glass can carve into any surface, as long as it's hard enough.
The rare eight-section map appears to date to 1690, likely based on the work of 17th-century Dutch engraver Gerard Valck, and published by George Wildey in London.
A textile print designer, wood engraver and mostly self-taught painter, he was, by 1825, a rising star in New York City, known for composing expansive vistas of untrammeled wilderness.
The exhibition begins with two etchings from Degas's youth: an elegantly solemn self-portrait (seen in two states) and an increasingly shadowy portrayal of the engraver Joseph Tourny (three states).
His wife doggedly pushed to publish his text, and with the help of de Hooghe, an engraver of the first water, Petter's treatise was released just two years after his death.
But with polished performer Tommy Fleetwood in second place, and the relentless Brooks Koepka lurking seven behind, the engraver will not start etching Lowry's name into the Claret Jug just yet.
This new combination 3D printer, laser engraver, and CNC milling machine from Polish company ZMorph, for example, wouldn't have looked out of place on the set of Interstellar or The Martian.
The inscription reads, "The names of the people interred in this grave are recorded on the memorial erected in another part of this cemetery" (a rather administrative tone for an engraver).
It might come as a surprise then that the elderly engraver is also the dishwasher at two Fort Worth Mexican restaurants, Revolver Taco Lounge and Campestre Chula Vista, both owned by Gino.
Thomas Major; self-portrait, 1759 Thomas Major (1720 – 30 December 1799) was an English engraver. His early career was in Paris. In England, he became engraver to Frederick, Prince of Wales; he was the first engraver recognized by the Royal Academy of Arts, and was chief seal engraver to the King.
John Goddard (fl. 1645–1671) was an early English engraver. He was apprenticed to the engraver Robert Vaughan in 1631.
He was appointed Assistant Engraver and Medallist at the Philadelphia Mint in 1917 before becoming the Chief Engraver in 1925.
Marie-Anne-Hyacinthe Horthemels (1682 – 24 March 1727) was a French engraver, wife of the King's engraver Nicolas-Henri Tardieu.
Pierre-Joseph Tiolier (17 March 1763 – 1819) was a French engraver who was appointed the 15th Engraver-General of France.
His son, Matthew Haughton, was an artist and engraver, and his nephew, Moses Haughton the Younger (1773–1849), a painter and engraver.
Thomas Wyon the elder (1767–1830) of the Wyon family was an English engraver of dies, who became Chief Engraver of the Seals.
Robert Mitchell (19 May 1820 – 16 May 1873) was an English engraver, son of the engraver James Mitchell. He died at Bromley, Kent.
François-Gérard Jollain (first mentioned 1684, last mentioned 1719) was an engraver. Gérard Jollain (first mentioned 1704, last mentioned 1719) was a copper engraver.
William Hamlin (15 October 1772 - 22 November 1869), an entrepreneur, was an early American engraver and the first engraver for the state of Rhode Island.
William Barber's skills came to the attention of Mint Chief Engraver James B. Longacre, who hired him as an assistant engraver in 1865; when Longacre died in 1869, William Barber became chief engraver and Charles was hired as an assistant engraver. William Barber died on August 31, 1879, of an illness contracted after swimming at Atlantic City, New Jersey. His son applied for the position of chief engraver, as did George T. Morgan, another British-born engraver hired by the Mint. In early December 1879, Treasury Secretary John Sherman, Mint Director Horatio Burchard, and Philadelphia Mint Superintendent A. Loudon Snowden met to determine the issue.
Chief Medallist of the Royal Mint was a senior position at the British Royal Mint responsible for the overseeing of medal production. Historically the position was created in 1828 as a compromise to allow Italian engraver Benedetto Pistrucci to be more involved in the mint's engraving process without becoming the Mint's chief engraver. Being a foreign born Italian, appointment of Pistrucci to the prestigious role of Chief Engraver would have proved too scandalous and therefore despite performing the duties of chief engraver he was awarded the title of Chief Medallist. The role of Chief Engraver previously held by Thomas Wyon was awarded to his cousin William Wyon who along with Pistrucci were required to share the wages of both the Chief Engraver and second engraver, much to their disliking.
Cristofano Berardi (18th century) was an Italian engraver. While born in Bologna, he is known for his vedute of France. He trained with the Florentine engraver Giuseppe Zocchi.
Alan Reynolds Stone, CBE, RDI (13 March 1909 – 23 June 1979), more commonly known as Reynolds Stone, was a noted English wood engraver, engraver, designer, typographer and painter.
Francesco Morelli (ca. 1767 – ca. 1830) was a French-Italian painter and engraver. He was active in Naples and known as a painter or engraver of Pompeian subjects.
Louis Jacoby (7 June 1828 – 1918) was a German Jewish engraver. Born in Havelberg, Brandenburg, Germany; pupil of the engraver Mandel of Berlin, in which city he settled.
William Hoogland (c.1794–1832) was an engraver in Boston, Massachusetts, and New York in the early 19th-century."William Hoogland, engraver, 2 Congress Square." Boston Directory. 1823.
Lot and His Daughters, 1600 Jan Harmensz. Muller (1571-1628) was a Dutch engraver and painter. Muller was born in Amsterdam. His father was a book printer, engraver and publisher.
His brother Alphonse François was also a distinguished engraver .
Portrait of Edward Scriven by Benjamin Phelps Gibbon, engraver; after original by Andrew Morton Edward Scriven (Alcester 1775 - 23 August 1841 London) was an English engraver of portraits, in the stipple and chalk manner. Scriven was the pre-eminent engraver of his generation, with 210 portraits ascribed to him by the National Portrait Gallery.
One of Clint's sons, Scipio Clint, was a notable medallist and seal engraver. Of his other sons Raphael Clint (1797–1849) was an engraver and Alfred Clint (1807–1833) a marine painter.
On the righthand side under the engraving: "F. Bartolozzi R.A. & Engraver to his Majesty sculpt." Francesco was a member of London's Royal Academy ("R.A."), and was the Royal Engraver to the king.
John Jackson (1801-1848) was a British wood-engraver. Jackson was born at Ovingham, Northumberland in 1801, and was apprenticed to the wood-engraver Thomas Bewick. After a quarrel with his master, Jackson went to London and worked for the wood-engraver William Harvey. Jackson made wood-engravings for Northcote's Fables and illustrations for the Penny Magazine.
Barber was born in London on November 16, 1840, the son of engraver William Barber. In 1869, he was appointed the assistant engraver at the United States Mint in Philadelphia.American Journal of Numismatics, Volumes 17-18, 1883. On January 20, 1880, he was appointed by President Rutherford B. Hayes to succeed his father in the position as chief engraver.
He remained in his native Lyon until his death in 1808. Print, 1755, Jean Pillement (designer and engraver) V&A; Museum no. 28639A Unknown engraver after J. Pillement. Vignette au gout chinois. 1760s.
Their son David Kindersley became an engraver and script designer.
Below the cartouche appears "VC," the initials of the engraver.
Thomas Halliday (c.1780 - c.1854) was an English coin and medal engraver associated with the Royal Birmingham Society of Artists. Halliday worked as an engraver at the Soho Mint in Handsworth, West Midlands.
Parasole married the engraver Isabella Parasole, and discarded his original last name, Norsini or Norcino, in favor of his wife's more distinguished last name. His son, Bernardino Parasole was also an engraver and painter.
In 1672 Wening was working part-time at the court as a quartermaster, arranging receptions and travel, and increasingly being called an engraver in court orders. By 1675 he was being called "court engraver".
Francesco De Grado (Naples, active 1694-1730) was an Italian engraver.
Dominique Barrière (c.1622–1678) was a French painter and engraver.
Besides acting, Burrows is also a skilled engraver and jewelry maker.
Benjamin Thomas Pouncy (died 1799) was an English draughtsman and engraver.
Quillivic was an accomplished engraver and his woodcuts are highly valued.
May Aimée Smith (1886–1962) was an English painter and engraver.
Simon was born in Brussels. He was a son of the engraver Jacob Simon, under whom he learned his trade. When not quite fifteen years of age he was appointed engraver to Prince Charles Alexander of Lorraine. In 1775 he removed to Paris, where he became engraver to the Duke of Orleans in Chartres, with a yearly salary of 200 thaler.
Elizabeth Reynolds (1825) Elizabeth Walker (1800–1876) was a British engraver and portrait-painter. She was born Elizabeth Reynolds in London, daughter of engraver Samuel William Reynolds. In 1829, she married Scottish engraver William Walker (1791–1867). She studied engraving under Thomas Goff Lupton, but after a while, decided to devote herself to miniatures (studying under George Clint) rather than engraving.
Bock was born in Sutton Coldfield, Birmingham, England. In his early years he was a chorister at Lichfield Cathedral. Later Bock worked as an engraver at 24 Great Charles Street Birmingham, alongside William Wyon who later became an engraver for the British Mint. After finishing his apprentiship he moved to London and established himself as an engraver and miniature painter.
John M. Mercanti (born April 27, 1943)Marquis Who's Who on the Web is an American sculptor and engraver. He was the twelfth Chief Engraver of the United States Mint until his retirement in late 2010.
Thomas Cheesman () attributed to Francesco Bartolozzi Thomas Cheesman (1760–1834) was a British engraver who worked in London. He was a student of the Italian engraver Francesco Bartolozzi, who was working in London at the time.
Map of the county of Flanders by Matthias Quad (cartographer) and Johann Bussemacher (engraver and printer), 1609. Joachim III Frederick, Elector of Brandenburg, ca. 1600. Johann Bussemacher (fl. c.1580 – 1613) was a German engraver and publisher.
Mikkel Røg (c. 1679 – c. 1737), also referred to by his latinized name Michael Augustus Roeg, was a Danish-Norwegian medal engraver. He served as medal engraver to the Royal Court in Paris from 1720 to 1737.
Ips calligraphus, known generally as coarsewriting engraver, is a species of typical bark beetle in the family Curculionidae. Other common names include the six-spined engraver beetle and six-spined ips. It is found in North America.
James Gabriel Huquier (1725–1805) was a portrait-painter and engraver. He was the son of the roccoco engraver Gabriel Huquier and his wife Marie-Ann (Desvignes). One of Huquier's subjects was Chevalier d'Eon, an early transvestite.
Willem Doudijns (1630–1697), was a Dutch Golden Age painter and engraver.
Francesco Giangiacomo (1783 - 22 February 1864) was an Italian illustrator and engraver.
Alfred Zierler (born 1933 Himberg, Austria), is an Austrian medallist and engraver.
Gerhard Bockman (1686–1773) was a Dutch portrait painter and mezzotint engraver.
Laura Cretara (Rome, December 28, 1939) is an Italian medallist and engraver.
Franz von Bocholt was a German engraver, working between 1458 and 1480.
Moczarski continued his underground activities there, changing his nickname to "Grawer" (Engraver).
William Faithorne the Younger (1656–c.1701) was an English mezzotint engraver.
Edmund Turrell (1781 – May 1835) was an English engraver and civil engineer.
Doris Raab (19 October 1851 - 1933) was a German etcher and engraver.
Louis-Félix Chabaud (1824-1902) was a French sculptor, engraver and medallist.
François Forster (22 August 1790 - 27 June 1872) was a French engraver.
Benoît-Louis Prévost (Paris, 1735 or 1747 - 1804) was a French engraver.
Edmond Dauchot (Gosselies, 1905 - 1978) was a Belgian photographer, poet and engraver.
Philopoemen Constantinidi (born Konstantinidis; ; 1909–1992) was a Greek painter and engraver.
Hamlet Winstanley (1698–1756) was an English painter and engraver. Hamlet Winstanley.
Homer Lee (1851–1923) was an American engraver, artist, inventor, and entrepreneur.
Critics note Bewick's skill as a naturalist as well as an engraver.
John Savage (fl. 1683–1701) was an engraver and printseller in London.
Daniel Dodd (fl. 1752–c.1780) was an English painter and engraver.
Quirijn, or Coryn Boel the Younger (1620 – 1668) was a Flemish engraver.
When Svante Nilsson was thirteen years old he began to study medal engraving for the Swedish engraver Adolf Lindberg (1839–1916)Adolf Lindberg in Konstnärslexikonett Amanda, Swedish medal engraver (Swedish)Adolf Lindberg, Swedish engraver (Swedish) in Stockholm. Adolf Lindberg was a prestigious and reputable medal engraver in Sweden during the 1800s. After ten years of teaching in Stockholm Svante Nilsson mastered the art of producing the medal stamps. Then he was awarded the scholarship of KommerskollegiumKommerskollegium (Swedish) in 1893, that he used to further education in Paris and Rome.
Hans Witdoeck was a pupil of the engraver Lucas Vorsterman in the years 1630-1631. Vorsterman had joined Rubens' workshop around 1617 or 1618 and had established himself as Rubens' primary engraver since.Hella Robels. "Vorsterman." Grove Art Online.
James Neagle (1760?–1822) was a British engraver. Very largely a line engraver of book illustrations, he was prolific of designs by Thomas Stothard, Robert Smirke, Henry Fuseli, Gavin Hamilton, Henry Singleton, Richard Cook, and other popular artists.
Henry Moses) Joseph Collyer (14 September 1748 – 24 December 1827), also called Joseph Collyer the Younger, was a British engraver. He was an associate of the Royal Academy and portrait engraver to the British Queen Consort, Queen Charlotte.
Nicolas-Henri Tardieu, called the "Tardieu the elder", (18 January 1674 - 27 January 1749) was a prominent French engraver, known for his sensitive reproductions of Antoine Watteau's paintings. He was appointed graveur du roi (King's Engraver) to King Louis XV of France. His second wife, Marie-Anne Horthemels, came from a family that included engravers and painters. She is known as an engraver in her own right.
William Angus was born in 1752. He became a master engraver. Among his pupils was the engraver William Bernard Cooke (1778–1855). He died in Islington, Middlesex in 1821; probate was granted on his will on 15 March 1822.
Joseph Goodyear (1799–1839) was an English engraver. Goodyear was born in Birmingham in 1799. He was first apprenticed to an engraver on plate in that town named Tye. He also studied drawing under G. V. Burkes at Birmingham.
Henry A. Papprill (1816-1903) was a British engraver. "The Team" (1875) Noted as an aquatint engraver from 1840. His plates were published from 1840 till 1883 mainly by Ackermann of the Strand. Papprill was born in Holborn, London.
One of the daughters, Amalia Pachelbel, achieved recognition as a painter and engraver.
François Tortebat (1616—June 4, 1690) was a French portrait painter and engraver.
Pietro Ermini (1774–1850) was an Italian painter and engraver, active in Florence.
John Eyre (1771– ), a pardoned convict, was an early Australian painter and engraver.
René Boyvin (1525–1598) was an influential French engraver who lived in Angers.
Hendrick Snyers (born 1611, Antwerp - died 1644, Antwerp), was a Flemish Baroque engraver.
Louis Moreau (1883 — 1958) was a French wood-engraver, anarchist and militant pacifist.
William Haines, engraver and painter, had his studio at No. 1, 1816–30.
Thomas Fairland (1804 – October 1852) was an English lithographer, engraver and portrait painter.
Luigi Papafava (1838–1908 Istituto Matteucci biography.) was an Italian painter and engraver.
St Vincent Philip Audinet (1766 – 18 December 1837), was an English line- engraver.
John Dunstall (fl. 1644–1675; died 1693) was an English engraver and teacher.
Cecil Mary Leslie (1900–1980) was an engraver, portrait painter, sculptor and illustrator.
Antonio Bresciani (Piacenza, 1720 - 31 October 1817) was an Italian painter and engraver.
Richard Livesay (1750–1826) was a British portrait and landscape painter, and engraver.
Rooke married Leonora Jane Jones; the wood-engraver Noel Rooke was their son.
Marianne or Mary Anne Trotter (1752?–1777) was an Irish artist and engraver.
John Kingsley Cook (1911-1994) was an English artist, teacher and wood engraver.
Henry Shaw (1800–1873) was an English architectural draughtsman, engraver, illuminator, and antiquary.
Nicolas-Pierre Tiolier, who became the official engraver of coins, was another pupil.
Aileen Eagleton (5 February 1902 – 1984) was a British painter and wood engraver.
Olivier Le May (26 May 1734 - 1797) was a French painter and engraver.
Elizabeth Joyce Rivers (1903-1964) was an Irish-based painter, engraver and illustrator.
James Carter (London 23 December 1798 - 23 August 1855) was a British engraver.
John Payne (1607–1647) was an English engraver, who was one of the earliest exponents of the art of engraving in England. His best work was the finest produced by a native-born engraver working during the reign of Charles I.
Published 1830. His father, James Willmore, was a manufacturer of silverware. At the age of fourteen Willmore was apprenticed to the Birmingham engraver William Radclyffe. His younger brother Arthur Willmore (1814-1888) trained with him, and also became an engraver.
Diana Scultori, Diana Mantuana, or Diana Ghisi (b.1535 AD) was an Italian engraver from Mantua, Italy. She is one of the earliest known women printmakers. She was one of four children of the sculptor and engraver Giovanni Battista Ghisi.
Nicholas Briot (about 1579 - 24 December 1646) was an innovative French coin engraver, medallist and mechanical engineer, who emigrated to England and became chief engraver to the Royal Mint in 1633 and is credited with the invention of the coining-press.
Scriven was born in 1775 at Alcester, Warwickshire, though his name does not appear in the parish register. He was for eight years a pupil of Northall (Northaw), Hertfordshire engraver Robert Thew. When Thew died in 1802, Scriven replaced him as Historical Engraver to the Prince of Wales. On the Prince of Wales' succession to the throne in 1820 as George IV Scriven was appointed Historical Engraver to the King.
Alfred Zierler was born in Himberg, near Vienna, on 28 May 1933. After Zierler had successfully completed an apprenticeship as an engraver, he found employment at the Vienna Mint where he remained until his retirement in 1993. Zierler was the engraver for the dies of the Austrian Mint, and served as the mint's chief engraver from 1984 to 1993. He also designed the post-WWII medals of the Republic of Austria.
He was born in London on 4 March 1779, son of Edward Noble (died 1784), a bookseller and author of a work on perspective, and brother of George Noble the engraver, and William Bonneau Noble the painter. His mother provided him with an education including Latin, and he was apprenticed to an engraver. In his professional life, Noble became a skilled architectural engraver, and made a good income.
Marie-Anne Rousselet was born in Paris, France on December 6, 1732 to medal engraver Alexis Étienne Rousselet. All four of her siblings were also engravers. She was related to engraver, Gilles Rousselet (1614–1686), and the sculptor, Jean Rousselet (1656–1693), both of whom were members of the Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture. In 1757, she married engraver and cartographer, Pierre François Tardieu, as his second wife.
Jean Stevo (28 May 1914 - 7 November 1974) was a Belgian painter and engraver.
Marie-Jeanne Renard du Bos (1701 - between 1730 and 1750) was a French engraver.
Renée-Élisabeth Marlié (1714 – 27 March 1773, Paris) was an 18th-century French engraver.
John Pass or Paas (c.1783–1832) was an English engraver and murder victim.
His signatures often acknowledge his identity as an engraver, a printer or a copier.
Jacques Houplain (10 September 1920 – 22 February 2020) was a French painter and engraver.
Orazio Brunetti (born 1630) was an Italian engraver and painter, active mainly in Rome.
John Wykeham Archer (1808 – 25 May 1864) was a British artist, engraver and writer.
William Haines (21 June 1778 – 24 July 1848) was an English engraver and painter.
Giovanni Battista Bolognini (1611–1668) was an Italian painter and engraver of the Baroque.
Henricus Hondius II (1597 – 16 August 1651) was a Dutch engraver, cartographer, and publisher.
Alessandro Baratta (April 16, 1639 – September 1, 1714) was an Italian painter and engraver.
William Nelson Gardiner (1766–1814) was an Irish engraver and bookseller, known for eccentricity.
Edward Gallaudet (April 30, 1809 - Oct. 11, 1847) was an American nineteenth century engraver.
John Foster (1648–1681) was the earliest American engraver and the first Boston printer.
Bartolomeo Baderna (1655-1681) was an Italian painter and engraver of the Baroque period.
Aniello Portio was an Italian engraver, who worked at Naples from 1690 to 1700.
Jacques Anthony Louis Beltrand (22 July 1874 – 2 December 1977) was a French engraver.
Copyrighted and Published (1860, 1862) by H.M. Higgins, 117 Randolph Street, Chicago. Pearson, engraver.
Gen Paul (July 2, 1895 – April 30, 1975), was a French painter and engraver.
Antonino Grano (1660–1718) was an Italian painter and engraver, principally active in Sicily.
Peter Spendelowe Lamborn (1722 – 5 November 1774) was an English engraver and miniature painter.
Witches' Sabbath Andries Jacobsz Stock (1580-1648) was a Baroque engraver, printmaker and illustrator.
Buildwas Abbey, 1825 John Coney (1786–1833) was an English architectural draughtsman and engraver.
Frank Holl. Francis Holl (23 March 1815 - 14 January 1884), was an English engraver.
William Pether (c. 1738 – 19 July 1821) was an English mezzotint engraver. Self-portrait.
Ferdinand Schmutzer (21 May 1870 – 26 October 1928) was an Austrian photographer and engraver.
Pio Panfili (May 5, 1723 – 17 June 1812) was an Italian painter and engraver.
John Greenwood Sr. (1727–1792) was an early American portrait painter, engraver and auctioneer.
His children included John M. Dearborn, the engraver Nathaniel Dearborn, and Fanny Dearborn Hanman.
Giancarlo Vitali (29 November 1929 – 25 July 2018) was an Italian painter and engraver.
William Radclyffe (20 October 1783 – 29 December 1855) was an English engraver and painter. Born in Birmingham and self-educated, he was apprenticed to a letter engraver and studied drawing under Joseph Barber with his cousin John Pye. Both planned to move to London when their apprenticeships were complete in 1801, but Radclyffe remained in Birmingham for financial reasons and set up as an engraver and copperplate printer. Radclyffe became well known as an engraver of landscapes, making prints after David Cox, J. M. W. Turner and Peter De Wint and illustrating numerous works of travel literature.
The Tamil portion at the end states that the inscription was engraved by the order of the king himself, and names the engraver as Yuddhakesari (or Chuttakesari) Perumbanaikkaran. The engraver was allotted a house site, a wet field and a dry field.
After her death, she quickly fell into obscurity and was only rediscovered at the beginning of the 20th-century. Her husband was engraver Christian Friedrich Traugott Duttenhofer. Their son Anton Duttenhofer was also a copper engraver and a pupil of his father.
Roberto Venturoni (Rome, 22 October 1945 – Rome, 18 September 2011), was an Italian painter, engraver and sculptor.National Library Service Catalog: Venturoni Roberto, information note Painter, sculptor, engraver. Born in Rome on 10/22/1945, active in Rome, died in Rome in 2011.
Apotheosis of the Virgin by Pietro del Pò, Toledo Cathedral Pietro del Pò (1616 - 22 July 1692), also spelled del Po, was an Italian painter, engraver and draughtsman of the Baroque. He was more distinguished as an engraver than as a painter.
Henry Wehrmann was an American engraver of the 19th century. With his wife, he became a successful engraver in the South in the early 1850s and during the American Civil War.Abel, pg. 258 He also published a collection of Louisiana Creole songs.
Samuel Williams (23 February 1788 - 19 September 1853) was a British draughtsman and wood-engraver.
He also was an early mentor to his nephew, the famous engraver Giovanni Battista Piranesi.
Albin Roberts Burt (1 December 178316 March 1842) was an English engraver and portrait-painter.
As an engraver, Baldi is known for a plate on The Conversion of St. Paul.
Christian Haldenwang Christian Haldenwang (14 May 1770-27 June 1831) was a German copperplate engraver.
He was also the engraver of the Halfpenny Yellow, the first postage stamp of Malta.
Theodore Henry Adolphus Fielding (1781 – 11 July 1851) was an English painter, engraver, and author.
Jean Henri Simon (28 October 1752 – 12 March 1834) was a Belgian engraver and soldier.
Harrison and Sons was a major worldwide engraver and printer of postage stamps and banknotes.
Camillo Graffico (or Grafico) (1565 - 1615) was an Italian engraver born in Cividale del Friuli.
Jean-Joseph Balechou (Arles, 11 July 1715 - Avignon, 18 August 1765) was a French engraver.
Charles Thompson (1791–1843) was a British wood-engraver, who made a career in France.
Cornelis van Caukercken (10 March 1626, Antwerp – 1680, Bruges) was a Flemish engraver and printseller.
Frederick William Faber, engraved by Joseph Brown Joseph Brown (1809-1887) was an English engraver.
Charles-Alexandre Coëssin de la Fosse (1829–1910) was a French neoclassisist painter and engraver.
Sidney Lawton Smith (1845–1929) was an American designer, etcher, engraver, illustrator, and bookplate artist.
Moses Harris, 1760 Moses Harris (15 April 1730 – 1787) was an English entomologist and engraver.
Johann Georg Schmidt (23 August 1694, Augsburg - 15 March 1767, Braunschweig) was a German engraver.
Pierre Prins (26 November 1838 – 21 January 1913) was a French painter, engraver and sculptor.
He is thought to have been the nephew of David Somerville, engraver (f.1798-1825).
John Smith in 1696 John Smith (c. 1652 – c. 1742) was an English mezzotint engraver.
Lucio Muñoz (December 27, 1929 – May 24, 1998) was a Spanish abstract painter and engraver.
The Esdalls had four children, including the artist and engraver, William Esdall (c.1750–1795).
Giuseppe Filippo Liberati Marchi (1735 – 2 April 1808) was an Italian-English painter and engraver.
Jan, or Jean Edelinck (c.1640 – 1680), was a Flemish engraver who worked in Paris.
"Remembering a Master Engraver: Frank Gasparro's Legacy Circulating Worldwide", National Public Radio, October 3, 2001.
Richard Houston (1721?–1775) was an Irish mezzotint engraver, whose career was mostly in London.
Francesco Darosio (1744 - 1788) was an Italian painter and engraver, active in Cremona and Rome.
Giuliano Giampiccoli (1698 - 10 December 1759) was an Italian engraver of vedute and architectural renderings.
Gerard Valck (30 September 1652 – 21 October 1726) was a Dutch engraver, publisher and cartographer.
Luke Clennell (8 April 1781 – 9 February 1840) was a British wood-engraver and painter.
Daniel Lizars Jr. (1793-1875) was a 19th-century Scottish engraver, map-maker and publisher.
François Joullain began his career as an engraver, etcher and print-maker. He received some of his early art education from the engraver, Claude Gillot and was entered as a member the Académie de Saint-Luc, 13 August 1733, as an engraver, and became its director, 19 October 1747.Guiffrey 1915. In his early career, he illustrated a number of books, sometimes in collaboration with other engravers, especially his former teacher, Claude Gillot.
His father was the engraver, Nicolas Barbant (1806-1879), from whom he received his first lessons. After having worked for the engraver Jean Best (1808-1879) at the "Atelier ABL", from 1863 to 1866, he became an associate of his father."Andrew-Best-Leloir", @ BnF In 1871, he married Louise Angélina Gauchard; daughter of the wood engraver, Félix-Jean Gauchard (1825-1872). Following her death in 1894, he married one of his students, .
In 1636 Willem visited Danzig in Poland. In 1641 he moved there from The Hague for good. Hondius was supported at the royal court of King Władysław IV Waza. The King awarded him the title of Chalcographus privilegialus (privileged engraver) and Chalcographus Regius (Royal engraver).
Ralph John Beedham (1879-1975) was a British wood-engraver. He occupies a unique position in the history of twentieth-century wood-engraving because, being a formschneider, he was probably the last person in Britain to serve an apprenticeship as a professional reproductive wood-engraver.
He was assisted by Henry Doncaster of Penkhull: his pupil William Greatbatch (father of William Greatbatch (1802-1885), another notable engraver) became chief engraver for Spode and for the successor company, Copeland's.Arthur Hayden, Spode and his Successors (Cassell, London 1925), pp. 62-64. In c.
He was born at Plymouth, the son of Samuel Hart (fl. 1785–1830), a Jewish engraver and teacher of Hebrew. After completing his basic education, he was apprenticed to another local engraver. Later, he became the first Jew to enroll at the Royal Academy.
Brian Hanscomb is an artist engraver from St Breward, Cornwall. Brian Hanscomb was born in 1944 at Croxley Green, Hertfordshire. His work is inspired by Quakerism, Zen Buddhism and Bodmin Moor. He served an apprenticeship in letterpress engraving and also trained as a gravure engraver.
An engraving by Letitia Byrne and Paul Amsinck Letitia Byrne (1779–1849) was a British engraver.
Donnington Castle in 1778, engraved by William Byrne William Byrne (1743–1805) was a British engraver.
He was also clever as an engraver, his plates being principally landscapes from his own designs.
B. de Almeyda was a Dutch Jewish engraver who worked in Amsterdam in the 17th century.
Abraham Isaac Polack was a Dutch Jewish engraver who worked in Amsterdam in the 18th century.
William Lodge (July 4, 1649 – 1689) was an English engraver and printmaker of the Baroque period.
Prior to 1837, the engraver had to cut the design onto the die face by hand.
The New York Bank Note Company was an engraver of stock certificates in New York City.
For the next three years, Francis worked for the Honolulu Advertiser, in Honolulu as an engraver.
George White (circa 1684-1732), Engraver Retrieved on 15 Mar 2018 Francis Charteris, around 1730–1732.
Richard Woodman (July 1, 1784 – December 15, 1859) was an English engraver and miniature portrait painter.
Portrait of the German poet Novalis, 1845 Friedrich Eduard Eichens (1804–1877) was a German engraver.
Painting by Aristidis Vlassis. Aristidis Vlassis (; 1947 – 26 May 2015) was a Greek painter and engraver.
William Angus (1752–1821) was an English engraver of copper plates for prints and book illustrations.
Antonio Capellan (Venice, ca. 1740– Rome, 1793) was an Italian engraver, active in a Neoclassical style.
Wood engraver John DePol considered Prelude to a Million Years his favorite of Ward's wordless novels.
In 1988, The Welsh Arts Council commissioned a film "Ronald Pennell – engraver" for the Arts Channel.
James Watson (c. 1739 – 1790) was an Irish engraver. Engraving from 1771 of Jemima, Countess Cornwallis.
John Scott (1774–1827) was an English engraver, known for his work on topics showing animals.
Self portrait (1760) Pieter Tanjé (1706-1761) was an 18th-century engraver from the Northern Netherlands.
Gabriel Méxène is a French-speaking poet, painter and engraver. , Bibliothèque Littéraire Jaques Doucet, catalogue SUDOC.
85; Eicher, pp. 123, 807. Bombardment of Fort Sumter, 1861. George Edward Perine (1837–1885), engraver.
William Sherwin (1645?–1709?) was an English engraver, one of the first to work with mezzotints.
Neagle had a son, John B. Neagle (died 1866), who practised as an engraver in Philadelphia.
Fabio Mauroner (1884 - 1944) was an Italian painter and engraver, known mainly of vedute of Venice.
Leonardo Castellani (1896 – 1984) was an Italian engraver and painter, mainly active depicting landscapes with chalcography.
Unknown artist / engraver. State Library of Victoria. This view was made during or before December 1875.
Pietro Anderloni (12 October 1784 – 13 October 1849) was an Italian engraver of the 19th century.
Barak Longmate (1738 – 23 July 1793) was an English genealogist and editor, heraldic engraver and publisher.
Yves Corbassière (16 May 1925 – 27 April 2020) was a French painter, sculptor, engraver, and lithographer.
Constance Gertrude Copeman (1864–1953) was a British painter, printmaker and engraver often of animal figures.
Joseph Édouard Stevens (26 November 1816 - 2 August 1892) was a Belgian animalier painter and engraver.
Pietro Paolétti (1801 in Belluno - October 23, 1847 in Belluno) was an Italian painter and engraver.
Harriet Ludlow Clarke (died 19 January 1866) was an English wood engraver and stained glass artist.
Joseph Shepherd Wyon (28 July 1836 – 12 August 1873) was a British medallist and seal-engraver.
Philipp Kilian, 1686 Philipp Kilian (1628 in Augsburg - 1693 in Augsburg), was a German Baroque engraver.
The daughter of the Irish engraver James Watson, she was born in London in 1760 or 1761, and studied under her father, who worked in mezzotint. She was known for her skilled worked in the stipple method, was particularly known for reproductions of miniatures, and was the only woman engraver to serve as an independent engraver in the British 18th century. She came to prominence as an engraver at about the same time as women began to make up a significant proportion print consumers. Her career began to wind down after 1810 due to ill health, and she died at Pimlico on 10 June 1814.
Major was the first English engraver to receive the honours of the Royal Academy of Arts, being elected Associate Engraver on 26 February 1770. In 1776 he exhibited at the Academy The Good Shepherd, after Bartolomé Esteban Murillo.Thomas Major, A. R. A. Royal Academy of Arts Collections, accessed 22 March 2016 He became chief seal engraver to the King, and was from 1756 to 1797 engraver to the Stamp Office. When the Great Seal was stolen from the house of Lord Chancellor Edward Thurlow on 24 March 1784, Major, within twenty hours, provided a perfect temporary substitute, and afterwards executed one in silver, which was used until the union with Ireland.
Business card for Humphry Repton (1752-1818) Thomas Medland (c.1765 – 1833) was an English engraver and draughtsman. He was drawing-master at Haileybury College and exhibited at the Royal Academy. He illustrated numerous works during his lifetime and was landscape engraver to the Prince of Wales.
Theresa Maria Coriolano (1620–1671) was an Italian engraver of the Baroque period. Coriolano was born in Bologna, the daughter of the engraver Bartolommeo Coriolano, and was instructed in painting by Elisabetta Sirani. She etched a small plate of the Virgin, half-length, with the Infant Jesus.
Vue des environs de Saverne Jacques Aliamet (30 November 1726, Abbeville - 29 May 1788, Paris) was a French engraver. His brother François-Germain Aliamet was also an engraver. He perfected drypoint and his several surviving works include engravings after Nicolaes Berchem, Philips Wouwerman and Claude Joseph Vernet.
Isaac Basire (20 September 1704 - 24 August 1768) was an engraver and first in a family line of prolific and well-respected engravers. Isaac Basire was known as a map engraver. His most well-known work is the frontispiece to an edition of Bailey's dictionary (1755).
George T. Morgan had designed the Morgan dollar in 1878. Stoudt supplied the concept for the coins, as well as sketches. Rather than seeking a private designer to produce plaster models, the Huguenot-Walloon commission approached the Mint's chief engraver, George T. Morgan, who turned 78 in 1923. Morgan, best remembered for his 1878 design for the Morgan dollar, had been chief engraver since 1917, following forty years as an assistant, mostly under Chief Engraver Charles E. Barber.
Bombardment of Fort Sumter, 1861. George Edward Perine (1837-1885), engraver. George Edward Perine (July 9, 1837 - February 3, 1885) was a noted artist, engraver, and publisher. In 1852, he began engraving for Thomas Doney in New York and in 1856-1858 for W.W. Rice, a line and bank-note engraver. He engraved in mezzotint a large plate, entitled “The Signing of the Compact in the Cabin of the Mayflower,” before he was nineteen years old.
Jacques Guay (1711–93) was a French gemstone engraver, a protegé of Madame de Pompadour (1721–1764), mistress of King Louis XV of France (1710–74). He was the most eminent gemstone engraver of his time, the official engraver of the king, and produced many cameo and intaglio engravings in semi-precious stones such as onyx, jasper and carnelian. Subjects included classical figures, events in the reign of the king and portraits of members of the court.
Edward Fisher (1730–c.1785) was an Irish-born mezzotint engraver, mostly of portraits, working in London.
Cuthbert Mayne in a mezzotint by Fournier Daniel Fournier (died 1766?) was an English engraver and draughtsman.
Léopold Flameng (22 November 1831, Brussels – 5 September 1911, Courgent) was a French engraver, illustrator and painter.
Giovanni Francesco Zabello (active c. 1546) was an Italian painter and engraver. He was born in Bergamo.
Abraham Lopez de Oliveira was a Dutch Jewish engraver who worked in Amsterdam in the 18th century.
Aaron Santcroos (also Sanctroos) was a Dutch Jewish engraver who worked in Amsterdam in the 18th century.
Georg Friedrich Schmidt (24 January 1712 Schönerlinde - 25 January 1775 Berlin) was a German engraver and designer.
M A Rooker) Edward Rooker (c. 1712 - 22 November 1774) was an English engraver, draughtsman and actor.
Robert Pollard, 1784 portrait by Richard Samuel Robert Pollard (1755–1838) was an English engraver and painter.
Martin Engelbrecht (16 September 1684, Augsburg - 18 January 1756, Augsburg) was a German Baroque engraver and publisher.
Abraham Allard (c.1676, Amsterdam - 26 January 1725, Amsterdam) was a Dutch map engraver active in Leiden.
John Pye (Birmingham 7 November 1782 - 6 February 1874 London) was a British landscape engraver. John Watkins.
Engraver Henry Wolf was born in Eckwersheim, only to eventually live and die in New York City.
Stonehenge, 1829, after Turner Robert William Wallis (7 November 1794 – 23 November 1878) was an English engraver.
Elsie Vera Cole (27 July 1885 – 2 January 1967) was an English painter, engraver and art teacher.
On his death, his son Jacques-Antoine Dassier took over as the chief engraver of Geneva currency.
He obtained the title of engraver of the King and taught drawing and painting in high society.
John Baptist Chatelain (1710–1758) was an English draughtsman and engraver of French background, specialized in landscapes.
Mary Viola Paterson (19 February 1899 – 1981) was a British painter, wood engraver and colour woodcut artist.
Mary Stewart, Duchess of Richmond, by Richard Gaywood Richard Gaywood (fl. 1650–1680) was an English engraver.
John Henry Le Keux (23 March 1812 – 4 February 1896) was an English architectural engraver and draughtsman.
Isaac Taylor (1759–1829) of Ongar was an English engraver and writer of books for the young.
Leighton, John M. Strath Clutha or the Beauties of Clyde. Joseph Swan Engraver, Glasgow. P. 14 - 15.
Eberhard Kieser (December 2, 1583, Kastellaun–November 1631, Frankfurt am Main) was a German engraver and publisher.
Rowse was born in Bath, Maine on January 29, 1822. He worked in Maine as an engraver.
Jacob Fosie (1679 - 1 December 1763) was a Danish artist, watercolor painter, etcher, engraver, organist and author.
Ercole Bazzicaluva, also spelled Bezzicaluva or Bazzicaluve (active 1640), was an Italian engraver of the Baroque period.
François-Augustin Bridoux (1813-1892) was a French engraver. He won the Prix de Rome in 1834.
Reinier van Persijn (1615 - 23 November 1668) was a Dutch Golden Age engraver of portraits and bookplates.
Robert Baugh (1748 – 27 December 1832) was a surveyor, copper-plate engraver, map-maker and print-maker.
Burnet Reading by Samuel De Wilde, 1798. Burnet Reading (1749–1838) was an English engraver and draughtsman.
Monica Poole (Canterbury, Kent 20 May 1921 - Tonbridge, Kent 3 August 2003), was a British wood-engraver.
Book illustrations before the 1860s involved both an artist and an engraver. Both the artists' work and the engravers' "copy" had copyright protection in England. Sometimes the artist and the engraver were the same person. New technology made the profession of engraving obsolete (except for currency) around 1860.
Pedro Perete, ( 16108 April 1639) was a seventeenth-century Baroque engraver and painter in Madrid. He was the son, and pupil, of engraver Peter Perret. Perete Hispanicized the family name from the Dutch "Perret". Many of his works have been attributed to or confused with those by his father.
In 1816 he was appointed assistant engraver to the mint, and in 1828 chief engraver. In 1831 he was elected associate and in 1838 full member of the Royal Academy. He died in Brighton. Wyon is buried under a simple rectangular York stone slab at West Norwood Cemetery.
Engraving of The Wakes, Selborne, signed by John Anderson, on title page of The Natural History of Selborne by Gilbert White. Published by Harper and Brothers, New-York, 1841. John Anderson (born 1775) was a Scottish wood- engraver and illustrator, a pupil of the British wood-engraver Thomas Bewick.
Mint Chief Engraver William Kneass prepared a sketch based on Patterson's conception, but suffered a stroke, leaving him partially paralyzed. Later in 1835, Christian Gobrecht was hired at the Mint as a draftsman, die sinker, and assistant engraver to Kneass. Although nominally a subordinate, Gobrecht would perform much of the engraving work for the Mint until Kneass' death in 1840, when Gobrecht was appointed chief engraver. Sully prepared sketches of the artwork, which Gobrecht used as a guide in engraving copper plates.
De Saulles came to London in 1884, and worked for John H. Pinches, the die-engraver, then in Oxenden Street, Haymarket. In 1888 he returned to Birmingham and worked for Joseph Moore, the medallist. During 1892 De Saulles was in London at the Royal Mint, on the death of Leonard Charles Wyon the chief engraver. In January 1893 he was gazetted "engraver to the mint", and from that time to his death produced dies for British and colonial coins and for official medals.
They settled in East Orange, New Jersey. Gustav, fell under the influence of the famed engraver W.J. Linton.
Richard Josey Richard Josey (4 October 1840 – 6 February 1906) was a prominent mezzotint engraver in Victorian London.
Pierre Schwarz (born in 1950 in Brussels) is a contemporary Belgian painter and engraver, neo-expressionist and muralist.
Garrick Salisbury Palmer (born 20 September 1933 in Portsmouth) is an English painter, wood engraver, photographer and teacher.
Jane Bewick (1787–1881) was the eldest daughter of the wood-engraver Thomas Bewick by his wife Isabella.
Anne Marie Trechslin (17 July 1927 – 28 June 2007) was a Swiss painter, wood engraver, draftsperson and illustrator.
Frederick Juengling (born Friedrich Jüngling, 8 October 1846 – 31 December 1889) was an American wood engraver and painter.
Jeanne Richomme was born in Paris, the daughter of painter Jules Richomme. Her grandfather was engraver Théodore Richomme.
Sabina Aufenwerth married an engraver and publisher, Issak Heinrich Hosennestel, in 1731 and continued to work for Meissen.
6 beetles, 1600 Pieter Holsteyn (1585-1662) was a Dutch Golden Age painter, engraver and stained glass worker.
Charles Taylor (1756–1823) was an English engraver, known also as a man of letters and biblical scholar.
Alejandro Jesús Obregón Rosės (4 June 1920 – 11 April 1992) was a Colombian painter, muralist, sculptor and engraver.
He then moved to Chicago and worked as an apprentice to an engraver and as a commercial artist.
Untitled (Arizona Canyon). 1923. Fred Grayson Sayre (1879 - December 31, 1938) was an American engraver, illustrator, and painter.
Albert Decaris (6 May 1901 – 1 January 1988) was a French artist, engraver, painter and Olympic Gold Medallist.
Selling Rabbits (1796) Industrious Cottagers (1801) Hay Makers (1793) William Ward, ARA (1766–1826) was an English engraver.
In that year he was made engraver to Cambridge University. Loggan was buried 1 August 1692 in London.
Antonio Basoli (1774–1848) was an Italian painter, interior designer, scenic designer, and engraver, active mostly in Bologna.
William Miller (28 May 1796 - 20 January 1882) was a Scottish Quaker line engraver and watercolourist from Edinburgh.
William Skelton (1763–1848) was an English engraver. Engraving of the bust of Samuel Parr by George Clarke.
Gudmar Olovson Gudmar Olovson (1 March 1936 – 17 April 2017) was a Swedish sculptor, artist, engraver and lithographer.
Giacomo Anziani (Ravenna, 1681 - 1723) was an Italian architect, painter, and engraver, active in a late-baroque style.
Isaac Lievendal was a Spanish engraver, who resided at Granada in the reign of Philip IV (1621-1665).
James Ward (23 October 1769 - 17 November 1859) was a British painter, particularly of animals, and an engraver.
Elizabeth married an engraver, Thomas Dixon, in 1756 and had long ceased working as a printer or bookseller.
Pierre-Simon-Benjamin Duvivier (3 November 1730 – 10 July 1819) was a French engraver of coins and medals.
Louis-Martin Berthault (30 September 1770 – 16 August 1823) was a French architect, decorator, engraver and landscape artist.
Bertha Züricher or Berthe Zuricker (20 March 1869 – 7 October 1949) was a Swiss author, painter and engraver.
Alex Cerveny is a Brazilian artist, engraver, sculptor, illustrator and painter, born in São Paulo, Brazil, in 1963.
Jacques-Joseph, Jacques Joseph or Joseph Coiny (19 March 1761, Versailles - 28 May 1809) was a French engraver.
The gardens, whose 18th-century layout was documented by the engraver Marc'Antonio dal Re, are also under restoration.
She signed her works Mlle Riollet.BEAUVARLET, Marie Catherine (1755 - 1788), Engraver (burin) in Bénézit Riollet died in Paris.
Jean de Courbes (1592 – 1641), or Juan de Courbes, was a French engraver who was active in Spain.
Clara, engraving from 1746. Elias Baeck (1679–1747) called "Heldenmuth", was a German painter and engraver from Augsburg.
Belle's first wife, Anne Chéron, died in April 1718. On 12 January 1722 he married as his second wife the engraver Marie-Nicolle Horthemels (born 1689, died after 1745), herself a painter and engraver. Together, they had two sons, born in 1722 and 1726, and a daughter born in 1730. With his new wife, Belle lived both among the remaining Jacobites at Saint Germain, where he owned property, and in Paris in the rue du Four. His second wife's sister Louise-Magdeleine Horthemels (1686–1767) was an important engraver in Paris for some fifty years and was the mother of the designer, engraver, and art critic Charles-Nicolas Cochin (1715–1790). Another of his wife's sisters, Marie-Anne-Hyacinthe Horthemels (1682–1727), worked in the same field and was the wife of Nicolas- Henri Tardieu (1674–1749), an engraver who was a member of the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture.
He was born of French parents. His first artistic studies were with Luigi Calamatta and Jean Gigoux. His skill as engraver was noticed by Charles Blanc and his collaboration in the Gazette des Beaux-Arts with fellow engraver Léon Gaucherel helped ensure the publication's reputation. He eventually provided one hundred illustrations.
Ips avulsus, the small southern pine engraver, is a species of typical bark beetle in the family Curculionidae. The pheromones ipsenol, ipsdienol, and lanieron combined attract the most colonization in the host material in regards to the chemical ecology of the small southern pine engraver, which also effects their reproduction processes.
Bernard François Lépicié (6 October 1698 – 17 January 1755) was an 18th- century French engraver, historiographer and biographer. Lépicié married Renée-Élisabeth Marlié, who became an engraver under the training of her husband and with whom he had a son, the painter Nicolas-Bernard Lépicié. He died from a stroke.
The Marriage of the Virgin by Matias de Arteaga, private collection, before 1703 Matias de Arteaga, also Matías de Arteaga y Alfaro, (c. 1630–1704) was a Spanish painter and engraver. Arteaga was born in Seville about 1630, the son of the engraver Bartolomé Arteaga. He studied painting under Valdés Leal.
The engraver and map publisher Peter Schenk was born in 1660 in Elberfeld. He moved to Amsterdam in 1675 and became a student of Gerard Valck specializing in mezzotint. Valck was married to Maria Bloteling, the sister of the Amsterdam engraver Abraham Bloteling. In 1687 Schenk married Gerard's sister Agatha Valck.
John Browne's A Compleat Discourse of Wounds (1678). Robert White (1645–1703) was an English draughtsman and engraver. A Londoner, he was a pupil of David Loggan, and became a leading portrait engraver. White was celebrated for his original portraits, drawn in pencil on vellum in the manner of Loggan.
He was born 23 March 1815 in Camden Town, London, the fourth son of the prominent engraver William Holl the Elder (c.1771-1838), to whom he was apprenticed. The engraver William Holl the Younger was his brother. He was both successful and fashionable, producing work for book and print publishers.
Geoffroy Gournet is a European-trained master engraver. He was born in France and moved the United States in 1985. In 1987 he became the official and sole engraver at Parker Reproductions, engraving the A1 Special.Salle, F.X., “La Gravure Selon Geoffroy Gournet,” La Passion des Couteaux, May/June 1996, Vol.
Joseph F. Menna is an American sculptor and engraver who has worked in both digital and traditional sculpture media.
Portrait of Antonio Triva Antonio Triva (1626-circa 1669) was an Italian painter and engraver of the Baroque period.
He was an uncle of the painter and engraver Georg Kaspar von Prenner He died in Vienna in 1761.
Engraving of the Schouwburg of Van Campen, Amsterdam Salomon Savery (1594-1683) was an engraver from the Northern Netherlands.
Giacomo Cantelli da Vignola (February 1643 − 30 November 1695) was an Italian cartographer and engraver of the 17th century.
Winifred Maria Louise Austen (12 July 1876- 1 November 1964) was an English illustrator, painter, etcher and aquatint engraver.
Eickwort, J. M., et al. Ips engraver beetles (Ips spp.) EENY-388. Entomology and Nematology. University of Florida IFAS.
Thomas Wyon the Younger (179222/23 September 1817) was an English medallist and chief engraver at the Royal Mint.
Richard Dalton (c.1715–1791) was an English draughtsman, engraver, and royal librarian. He later became an art dealer.
Mary Ann Yates as Medea, mezzotint by William Dickinson, 1771 William Dickinson (1746–1823) was an English mezzotint engraver.
Albert Bitran (1931 in Istanbul, Turkey – 9 November 2018 in Paris, France) was a French painter, engraver and sculptor.
George Morren or Georges Morren (20 July 1868 - 21 November 1941†) was a Belgian painter, sculptor, Impressionist and engraver.
Giovita Garavaglia (18 March, 1790 in Pavia, Region of Lombardy – 27 April, 1835 in Florence) was an Italian engraver.
Teresa del Pò (1649–1716), also spelled del Po, was an Italian painter and engraver of the late Baroque.
Pierre Albuisson (2008) Pierre Albuisson (born 26 September 1952 in Madagascar) is a French postage stamp engraver and designer.
Henley bridge 1811 Pulpit Rock Bonchurch, 1849 William Bernard Cooke (1778 – 2 August 1855), was an English line engraver.
Johann Burger (born 31 May 1829 in Burg, Aargau; died 2 May 1912 in Munich) was a Swiss engraver.
A print by the engraver Cornelis Bloemaert is based on the painting at the Hermitage.Print by Bloemart after Lanfranco.
It was made by an anonymous engraver in 1538 and is sometimes identified with the manner of Agostino Veneziano.
William Thomas Fry (1789–1843) was a British engraver. He occasionally exhibited his engravings at the Suffolk Street exhibition.
Charles Spooner (died 1767) was an Irish mezzotint engraver, who worked in London towards the end of his life.
Giuseppe Vasi (27 August 1710 – 16 April 1782) was an Italian engraver and architect, best known for his vedute.
Andrew Lawrence (1708/10 – 8 July 1747), also known as André Laurent, was an English engraver, working in Paris.
Samuel Calvert, was an engraver and painter active in Australia and produced a memoir of his father in 1893.
The engraver spreads a thin sheet of wax over the metal plate and uses ink to draw the details. Then, the engraver traces the lines with a stylus to etch them into the plate beneath. The engraver can also use styli to prick holes along the drawn lines, trace along them with colored chalk, and then engrave the map. Lines going in the same direction are carved at the same time, and then the plate is turned to carve lines going in a different direction.
15 Cheyne Walk, Chelsea, London, where Ryall once lived Henry Thomas Ryall (August 1811 - 14 September 1867) was an English line, stipple and mixed- method engraver and later used mixed mezzotint. Ryall was appointed the royal engraver by Queen Victoria. Forty of his works are in the National Portrait Gallery in London.
Joseph Jenkins was born in London in 1811. He was the son of an engraver, who trained him as an engraver. He later abandoned engraving for watercolor painting, focusing on domestic subjects and landscapes. In 1842, Jenkins was elected an associate of the New Water Colour Society and became a member in 1843.
He was born in Abbeville, the son of a goldsmith who gave him his first drawing lessons. He was apprenticed to the Parisian engraver Pierre Daret. Poilly then travelled to Rome where he stayed for seven years with the engraver Cornelis Bloemaert, where he acquired mastership of the art. He died in Paris.
Pieter Perret ( 1555–1625) was a Flemish engraver who worked in Madrid in the service of Philip II of Spain. He married Isabel de Faria, who was born in Portugal, with whom he had a son, also named Peter. His son, also an engraver, Hispanicized his name and went by "Pedro Perete".
Louis A. Hill was born in Boston in 1865.Profile from the Bureau of Engraving and Printing He was educated at Columbian University. After college, Hill worked as an engraver in Philadelphia. His father, John R. Hill, worked as an engraver in the Bureau of Engraving and Printing from 1882 to 1913.
Marie-Anne had at least five siblings. Her sister Louise-Magdeleine Horthemels was an active reproductive engraver who married Charles-Nicolas Cochin, graveur du roi. Marie-Nicole married Alexis Simon Belle, peintre ordinaire du roi. Her brothers Daniel and Denys continued in the bookselling trade, while Frédéric Horthemels was also an engraver.
Karel van Mallery, by Anthony van Dyck Karel van MalleryName variations: Karel van Mailleri, Karel van Malery, Carel de Mallery, Charles van Maillery, Charles de Mallery (1571-1635?) was a Flemish engraver who mainly worked on religious subjects and portraits and was also a reproductive engraver. He worked in Antwerp and Paris.
S. Maria Kirch zu Franck - Furt an der Oder - a pen and ink drawing by Johann Stridbeck the Younger, 1690 Johann Stridbeck the Younger (1665, Augsburg - 19 December 1714, Augsburg) was a German draughtsman, engraver and publisher. He trained under his father, the engraver and publisher Johann Stridbeck the Elder (died 1716).
With a staff of six men, including an engraver, Bristol was the only mint outside London to make gold coins, and also the only one apart from that at the Tower of London to have its own engraver. As well as English coins, it also produced the coinage of Ireland.Bristol Castle at brisray.
Gandolfi was promoted to professor at the Academy in 1794. After the turn of the century he switched to engraving. In 1801, he moved to Paris to specialize as an engraver, and created reproductions by engraving the works of French museums. After returning to Italy, he worked as an engraver in Bologna.
Back in Rome in 1663 he married the German lady Lucia Fosman there. He is known as a portrait engraver.
John Buckland Wright (1897–1954) was a painter and draughtsman, but primarily an etcher and engraver who was self-taught.
Francesco Gonin (Turin, December 16, 1808 – Giaveno, near Susa, Piedmont, September 14, 1889) was an Italian painter, engraver and scenographer.
His son, Erling, eventually followed in his father's footsteps with an academy education, and a career as a copperplate engraver.
Giovanni Boccaccio by Morghen, after Vinzenzo Gozzoni Raffaello Sanzio Morghen (19 June 1758 – 8 April 1833) was an Italian engraver.
Melecio Figueroa () is a Filipino sculptor and engraver whose design was featured in previous coin series of the Philippine peso.
Mint Engraver James B. Longacre, its designer, had borrowed Gobrecht and Peale's eagle reverse for the one-cent coin's obverse.
Frank Leslie (March 29, 1821 – January 10, 1880) was an English-born American engraver, illustrator, and publisher of family periodicals.
Rowland John Robb Langmaid R.A. (1 December 1897 – 11 February 1956) was a British Seaman, engraver, artist and war artist.
"Cabinet des singularitez d’architecture, peinture, sculpture, et graveure", 1699 Florent le Comte (1655-1712), was a French writer and engraver.
David van der Kellen Jr. (1804, Amsterdam - 1879, Utrecht), was a 19th-century engraver and medallist from the Northern Netherlands.
David van der Kellen Sr. (1764, Velsen - 1825, Utrecht), was a 19th-century engraver and medallist from the Northern Netherlands.
Baker was also related to clergyman Neville Arthur Blachley Borton.Other family connections include John Browne, a renowned English landscape engraver.
Sante Pacini (1735 – circa 1790) was an Italian painter and engraver active mostly in Tuscany in an early Neoclassic style.
Landscape after Canaletto by Joseph Wagner. Joseph Wagner (1706 - 1780) was a highly regarded eighteenth century German engraver and draughtsman.
François Aimé Louis Dumoulin (10 August 1753 in Vevey - 16 February 1834 in Vevey) was a Swiss painter and engraver.
Alfred-Georges Regner (22 February 1902, in Amiens – 20 September 1987, in Bayeux), was a French surrealist painter and engraver.
Alexis Clairaut, engraving by Charles-Nicolas Cochin and Cathelin, ca. 1770. Louis-Jacques Cathelin (1738–1804) was a French engraver.
Francis William Topham Francis William Topham (Leeds 15 April 1808 – 31 March 1877 Córdoba) was an English watercolourist and engraver.
His youngest son, Alphonse Boilly (1801–1867), was a professional engraver who apprenticed in New York with Asher Brown Durand.
Josiah Wood Whymper (Ipswich 24 April 1813 - 7 April 1903 Haslemere) was a British wood-engraver, book illustrator and watercolourist.
Lionel Floch was born in Quimper in 1895 and died in 1972. He was a French painter, engraver and designer.
He later lived in Orme House in Hampton, Edgefield, Norfolk, and Coltishall, Norfolk. He became a court engraver in 1792.
Ferdinand Kobell. Portrait by Joseph Hauber. Ferdinand Kobell (7 June 1740 – 1 February 1799) was a German painter and engraver.
He was best known for his work as a wood engraver, for publications such as Scribner's Magazine and Harper's Magazine.
Irvine Development Corporation. 1992. # Leighton, John M. (1850). Strath Clutha or the Beauties of the Clyde. Glasgow: Joseph Swan Engraver.
Ludwig Hess Ludwig Hess (18 October 1760, Zürich - 13/16 April 1800, Zürich) was a Swiss landscape painter and engraver.
Nathan Lacy. Engraving by Alessandro Della Via. Alessandro della Via was an Italian engraver. He resided at Venice c. 1730.
François Chifflart (date unknown) François-Nicolas Chifflart (21 March 1825 – 19 March 1901) was a French painter, designer and engraver.
An 1811 engraving of balloonist Sophie Blanchard by Luigi Rados Luigi Rados (19 October 1773 – 1840) was an Italian engraver.
Engraved portrait of Balthasar Hubmaier Christoffel van Sichem (1581, Basel - 1658, Amsterdam), was a Dutch Golden Age woodcutter and engraver.
Pierre Risch in 2008. Pierre Risch, born in 1943 in Paris, is a painter, engraver, lithograph, sculptor, and French designer.
Self-portrait by Francesco Zucchi, 1733 Francesco Zucchi (Venice, 1692-1764), was an Italian engraver, active mainly in Northern Italy.
Gustavo Cochet (May 6, 1894 – July 27, 1979) was a painter, engraver, and writer who worked in Barcelona and Rosario.
Her painting was reproduced by the wood- engraver William Luson Thomas in the Illustrated London News on 30 March 1861.
440 which refers to his knighthood. Coriolano had a daughter, Theresa Maria Coriolano, who was also an engraver and painter.
Encyclopædia Britannica claims that he was also active as an engraver, but this claim is not found in other sources.
Jan van Aken (1614 – 25 March 1661 (buried)entry in the RKD) was a Dutch Golden Age painter and engraver.
Miguel Antonio Smith Irisarri (29 September 1832 - 24 May 1877) was a Chilean landscape painter, engraver, caricaturist and art teacher.
Nicolas Pitau, or Pittou the Senior (13 May 1632 – 11 February 1671) was a Flemish-born French engraver and printmaker.
Bartholomew grave, Grange Cemetery, Edinburgh John Bartholomew Sr. (26 April 1805 - 8 April 1861) was a Scottish cartographer and engraver.
Portrait by Joachim von Sandrart for his Teutsche Academie Matthäus Merian (1621 - 1687), was a Swiss engraver and portrait painter.
Cornelis Floris was a versatile artist. He was mainly active as architect and sculptor, but also worked as an engraver.
Neele was the son of Samuel John Neele (1758–1824), a cartographer, engraver, and copperplate and printer,World-Cat Identities.
170 On August 27, 1835, Kneass suffered a debilitating stroke that left him paralyzed on his right side. Once second engraver Christian Gobrecht was hired, he did most pattern and die work until Kneass died in office on August 27, 1840. Kneass was succeeded by Gobrecht as Chief Engraver on December 21 of that year.
Her grandfather, Jan Chalon, was an artist, collector and engraver and her great-aunt, Christina Chalon, was a painter and draughtswoman. In 1840 she married Henry Moseley,London Metropolitan Archives, Saint Pancras Parish Church, Register of marriages, 22 October 1840 a painter and engraver. From this time on she was known as Mrs. Henry Moseley.
An 1811 Classic Head large cent The obverse of a "Classic Head" quarter eagle The Classic Head was a coin design issued by the United States Mint in the early 19th century. It was introduced for copper coinage in 1808 by engraver John Reich and later redesigned and improved by Chief Engraver William Kneass.
After the death of his first wife, he remarried Sara van der Steen on 9 December 1634. His second wife was the mother of Alexander who also became an engraver. His daughter Sara married Gaspar Huybrechts, another prominent Antwerp engraver and publisher. Alexander was active from 1634 in the local chamber of rhetoric "De Violieren".
Guerrino Mattia Monassi (Urbignacco di Buja, 1918 - Bergamo, 1981) was an Italian medalist and engraver. He was a pupil of who called him to Rome in 1934 in the workshop of Torre dei Capocci. In 1963 he was appointed chief engraver at the Istituto Poligrafico e Zecca dello Stato. Among his best known works are .
Engraving of Clara and a human skeleton for Tabulae sceleti et musculorum corporis humani, drawn by Jan Wandelaar, engraved by Charles Grignion the Elder, 1749. Charles Grignion the Elder (1721–1810) was a British engraver and draughtsman. Grignion was born in London to Huguenot refugees. He was a prolific historical engraver and book illustrator.
He was the eldest of the four sons of George Wyon, an engraver. Around 1796, he went into business in Birmingham with his brother Peter, father of William Wyon, as a general die-engraver. They resided at Lionel Street in 1797. Wyon engraved many dies for tokens, especially part of the Coventry series of buildings.
Morgan was born in Birmingham, England where he worked for many years as a die engraver. He came to the United States in 1876 and was hired as an assistant engraver at the Mint in October under William Barber. He figured very prominently in the production of pattern coins from 1877 onward, and designed several varieties of 1877 half dollars, the 1879 "Schoolgirl" dollar, and the 1882 "Shield Earring" coins. He became the seventh Chief Engraver of the United States Mint following the death of Charles E. Barber in February 1917.
Charles Chaplin (1907-1987) was an English artist, engraver and printmaker. "You teach me a little about engraving and I will teach you a little about art" was the remarkable offer made by Robert Austin to his new student, Charles Chaplin. Austin, an eminent engraver himself, had become Chaplin's tutor at the Royal College of Art in September 1947. Chaplin, a mature student, was a printer's commercial engraver; he was also an amateur artist whose prints had already received some recognition and had been hung at the Royal Academy summer exhibitions.
Bacchante by Veronica Fontana. First published in Lorenzo Legati's Museo Cospiano, annesso a quello del famoso Ulisse Aldrovandi, Bologna, 1677 Veronica Fontana (1651–1690) was an Italian engraver. Fontana was the daughter of the engraver Domenico Maria Fontana, and was a native of Parma, although she would be associated with Bologna for much of her career. She was inspired by the example of the engraver Teresa Maria Coriolano, also of Bologna, and was encouraged in her pursuits by Elisabetta Sirani, with whom she took lessons; she also studied with her father.
John Evelyn termed him "that excellent engraver... who emulates even the ancients in stone and metal" (Diary, 20 July 1678), and Samuel Pepys declared his medals to be "some of the finest pieces of work, in embossed work, that I ever did see in my life" (Diary, 26 March 1666). John's brother, Joseph, was Engraver-General at the Monnaie de ParisThe French Engraver at the Dublin Mint, Coin News, June 2019.. His sons James Roettiers (1663–1698) and Norbert Roettiers (1665–1727) were also famed engravers and medallists both in England and in France.
Worcester porcelain tea canister c.1768, engraver Robert Hancock Hancock was born in Staffordshire, studied under Simon François Ravenet, and was at first engaged as an engraver at the Battersea Enamel Works under Stephen Theodore Janssen. In 1756 or 1757 he became draughtsman and engraver to the Worcester Porcelain Works, and engraved plates for the transfer-printed china for which the works became known. He was one of the proprietors of the works from 3 March 1772 till 31 October 1774, when he sold his share, after disputes with the other partners.
Adrian Zingg received his term training with his father, the steel cutter Bartolomäus Zingg, and then became an apprentice with engraver Johann Rudolf Holzhalb (1723-1806). In 1757 he worked in Bern, painting vedute with Johann Ludwig Aberli. Together with the medalist Johann Caspar Mörikofer (1732-1790), he travelled to Paris in 1759, where Zingg worked for seven years with the engraver Johann Georg Wille. In 1764 he was supported by Christian Ludwig von Hagedorn as an engraver at the newly founded Dresden Academy of Fine Arts, where he worked as a teacher from 1766.
Introduced to the mezzotint engraver, John Bonnar, James became interested in a more rapid process for preparing the plate for the engraver - possibly the engineering streak in him his father noticed. He also developed an intense interest in mezzotinting and soon began his career in that art and as an engraver in general. As a mezzotinter, for over fifty years, he was possibly only excelled in his day by Samuel Cousins (1801–1887). Several of Faed's mezzotints were commissioned by the Royal Association for the Promotion of Fine Arts in Scotland.
St. Jerome Dying in Solitude, 1614. Luca Ciamberlano (born circa 1580) was an Italian painter and engraver of the Baroque period.
Nebojša Mitrić (Belgrade, Kingdom of Yugoslavia, 7 July 1931 – Belgrade, Yugoslavia, 23 August 1989) was a sculptor, painter, engraver and medalist.
Cornelis Bloemaert, The Holy Willibrord, 1630 Cornelis Bloemaert II (1603 – 28 September 1692), was a Dutch Golden Age painter and engraver.
Mario Gaetano Gioffredo, also called the Neapolitan Vitruvius (14 May 1718 – 8 March 1785), was an Italian architect, engineer, and engraver.
The Young Housekeeper John Ingram (1721 – 1767 or later) was an English engraver. In his later career he lived in Paris.
Carl Friedrich Irminger (8 November 1813 in Aadorf, Switzerland - 27 March 1863 in Zürich) was a Swiss draughtsman, lithographer and engraver.
Prospero Sarti (died 1904) was an Italian engineer, architect, engraver, and collector of antiquities, including a numismatist of ancient Roman coins.
Modelo em Repouso (1988). Vasco Prado (Uruguaiana, April 16, 1914 – Porto Alegre, December 9, 1998) was a Brazilian sculptor and engraver.
After his NBA stint he coached basketball at Hiseville High School and was an engraver for the Louisville Courier-Journal newspaper.
Julio Castellanos González (b. Mexico City, October 3, 1905 – d. Mexico City, July 16, 1947) was a Mexican painter and engraver.
Colorado State University Extension. 2013. ips engraver beetles,Ips spp. Bark and Wood Boring Beetles of the World. Bugwood Network. 2006.
Ilya Schor (16 April 1904 - 7 June 1961) was an artist, a painter, jeweler, engraver, sculptor, and renowned artist of Judaica.
Turret in Fontaine Rue d'Ecole de Medicines demolished in 1877 Alfred- Alexandre Delauney (1830–1894) was a French painter and engraver.
François Poilly, or François de Poilly, (1623,Born in 1622 or 1623 according to the sources. –1693) was a French engraver.
Signature of a pickhamer above Joost Jansz Joost Janszoon Bilhamer (1521 - 8 November 1590) was a Dutch sculptor, engraver, and cartographer.
Pietro Antonio Martini (9 July 1738 – 2 April 1797) was an Italian painter and engraver, active in a late Baroque style.
Woolnoth was engraver to Queen Victoria.www.parliament.uk, The Trial of Strafford. His work was also included in Cadell and Davies Britannia depicta.
Thomas Baron Pitfield (5 April 190311 November 1999) was a British composer, poet, artist, engraver, calligrapher, craftsman, furniture builder and teacher.
Louise-Magdeleine Horthemels: Reproductive Engraver by Elizabeth Poulson in Woman's Art Journal, vol. 6, no. 2 (Autumn, 1985 – Winter, 1986), pp.
Watson died in Fitzroy Street, London, on 20 May 1790. The engraver Caroline Watson (1761?–1814) was his daughter and pupil.
Torre della Muda, Giovanni Paolo Lasinio, engravings dated 1865 Giovanni Paolo Lasinio (c. 1796-1855) was an Italian engraver and painter.
Annie French (6 February 1872 – 27 January 1965) was a Scottish painter, engraver, illustrator, and designer associated with the Glasgow School.
He died in October 1817, in his eighty-seventh year. Valentine Green and James Ross the line-engraver were his pupils.
Arthur Comfort (11 November 1864 - 1935) was a British wood-engraver at The Graphic in London and art teacher in Halifax.
Benjamin Phelps Gibbon (1802–1851) was a Welsh line-engraver. He concentrated on animal and portrait engravings, carried out for publishers.
Frederic L. Pape (October 17, 1870 – November 7, 1938), known as Eric Pape, was an American painter, engraver, sculptor, and illustrator.
Willem or Guiliam van Nieulandt, sometimes Nieuwelandt (1584–1635) was a Dutch Golden Age painter, engraver, poet and playwright from Antwerp.
Remy Ladoré is Rémy Lejeune’s artist name (7 October 1932 – 17 July 1996) he was a French draftsman, engraver and painter.
Gwenda Morgan (1 February 1908 – 1991) was a British wood engraver. She lived in the town of Petworth in West Sussex.
Ganymede François Chauveau (10 May 1613 – 3 February 1676) was a French artist, known as a burin engraver, draftsmen and painter.
Facades in the Grachtenboek Caspar Jacobsz Philips (1732 - 1789), was an 18th- century engraver and architectural historian of the Northern Netherlands.
Houbraken had ten children. His son Jacobus Houbraken (1698–1780) was an engraver of portraits and book illustrations, including books by his father. His daughter Antonina Houbraken also became an engraver for an Amsterdam publisher, and is known today for her embellishment of cityscapes and buildings with animals and people. His daughter Christina Houbraken was also an artist.
Giove bacia Ganimede by Cherubino Alberti, after a work by Polidoro da Caravaggio. Cherubino Alberti (1553–1615), also called Borghegiano, was an Italian engraver and painter. He is most often remembered for the Roman frescoes completed with his brother Giovanni Alberti during the papacy of Clement VIII. He was most prolific as an engraver of copper plates.
Around 1650 he became a collaborator and friend of the master engraver Abraham Bosse, who had a strong influence.Adamczak 2011, p. 36. His crayon drawings and engraved portraits having attracted attention, by 1652 his work was in high demand. By 1657 he was pensioned by Louis XIV and appointed designer and engraver of the king's cabinet.
Line engraving of Robert van Voerst by Thomas Chambers, after Sir Anthony van Dyck Robert van Voerst (bapt. 8 December 1597 in Deventer – before October 1636 in London) was a Dutch engraver. He studied under Crispin van de Passe. He arrived in England in 1628 and soon afterwards Charles I of England appointed him his royal engraver.
Manuel Salvador Carmona; portrait by Anna Maria Mengs Bust Portraits of Charles III, with Charles IV and Queen Maria Luisa A Tooth-puller and his Patient Manuel Salvador Carmona (20 May 1734 – 15 October 1820) was a Spanish engraver, designer and illustrator. Two of his brothers were also artists: , a sculptor, and Juan Antonio Salvador Carmona, also an engraver.
William James Thomson was a Canadian artist, and engraver, best known for the images he recorded of Toronto. Some of those structures are only known from his paintings, drawings, and engravings. From 1889-1893 Thomson worked as an engraver for the Toronto Globe. The Archives of Ontario curates a collection of over 900 of his Globe engravings.
Giovanni Cendramini (1760 – 8 February 1839) was an Italian painter and engraver. He was born in Roncade, Province of Treviso. At the age of 19 years, he came to London and apprenticed with Francesco Bartolozzi, an engraver from Florence, then in England. Cendramini married an English wife and in 1805 was invited to Russia and patronized by the emperor.
Jan van Londerseel was probably a pupil of Abraham de Bruyn in Antwerp. Van Londerseel married a niece of his master Abraham de Bruyn. His wife's brother Nicolaes de Bruyn was another Flemish engraver who made a name in the Dutch Republic. Around 1600 Jan followed his brother Assuerus van Londerseel, also an engraver, to Rotterdam.
The genus was named in honor of Johann Metzger (1771–1844), a German copper engraver and art restorer from Staufen im Breisgau, in Baden- Württemberg, a friend of Giuseppe Raddi and pupil of the great Florentine engraver Raffaello Sanzio Morghen (1753–1833).K. Danz 2003. ‘Florenz ist die Schazkammer von klassischen Gemälden’. Der Florentiner Kunstmarkt im beginnenden 19.
Photograph of Leggo taken in 1871 William Augustus Leggo (25 January 1830 - 21 July 1915) was a Canadian inventor, engraver and businessperson. He is noted for co-inventing the half-tone engraver with George-Édouard Desbarats. He had several patents to his name, including leggotyping and granulated photography. Leggo was born in the City of Quebec.
Increase Mather Old North Church Johnston was born in 1708 in Boston, Massachusetts. He was an engraver, an ornamental painter, a japanner, a coats of arms painter, a book publisher, and a builder of organs. He decorated clocks and furniture with embossed or raised work depicting Chinese images. He was a skillful engraver and heraldic painter.
Philipp Otto Runge and Caspar David Friedrich were influenced by his work. Graff was a sociable person. He cultivated friendships with many of his sitters, business partners and colleagues such as the Polish engraver Daniel Chodowiecki, the Swiss painters Salomon Gessner and Adrian Zingg and the Saxon engraver Johann Friedrich Bause. Bause reproduced many of Graff's portraits as engravings.
Pierre Guillaume Alexandre Beljambe (10 May 1759 - 9 March 1838 Archives de Paris, fichier de l'état-civil reconstitué.) was a prolific French artist, stipple engraver and burin engraver. Some biographies spell his surname Bellejambe, Belejambe or Beljame - in 1824 his two sons (one of whom had a university career) won authorisation to change their surname to Beljame.
In 1901 a stationer, two actors, a soap traveller and the gun engraver are mentioned. In 1911 three families included the gun engraver, his wife and daughter who was a perfumer's shop assistant, a family of four tailors, an apprentice architect and an apprentice tailoress and a blacksmith, William Prince and his son an assistant and daughter.
James Madison, 1809-1817 David Edwin (1776–1841) was an English-American engraver. He was born in Bath, England. He was the son of John Edwin, a comic actor, and was apprenticed to an engraver, but he ran away to sea and reached America in 1797. There he was employed by Edward Savage, the portrait painter.
Giovanni Pichler was born on 10 January 1734 in Naples, where his father, the Tyrolean gem-engraver, Anton Pichler, had settled. He was the brother of Luigi Pichler, who also became a gem-engraver. In 1743 his father moved to Rome. Giovanni was educated by his father in classical methods, and apprenticed to Domenico CorviThe Grove Encyclopaedia of Engraving.
He was the son of the Rev. Benjamin Gibbon, vicar of Penally, Pembrokeshire, who died in 1813. He was educated at the Clergy Orphan School, and then was articled to Edward Scriven, the chalk-engraver. Although he was interested in acting, when he had worked his articles he went to work under the line-engraver John Henry Robinson.
The company had three printing presses and was a significant company. She printed the second edition of the Miguel de Cervantes novel Don Quijote, in 1762, and printed for the seminary and the Episcopal Palace of Barcelona. She was also active as an engraver, trained by her father, and many works of her production as an engraver survives.
Louis-Joseph Masquelier or Masquelier the Elder (21 February 1741 – 26 May 1811) was a French draughtsman and engraver. Born in Cysoing near Lille in northern France, he died in Paris. He was very close to François-Denis Née, with whom he studied under Jacques-Philippe Le Bas. His son Claude-Louis Masquelier was also an engraver and lithographer.
Pio Siotto (Rome, May 3, 1824 - ?) was an Italian artist active as a cameo engraver (gem engraver). He studied architecture, figure, ornate and modeling in clay at the Academy of St. Luke in Rome, and his teacher in modeling was Pietro Tenerani. He initially apprenticed with Bartolomeo Rinaldi: but soon set up his own studio. He was prolific.
Issue of 1890 Alfred Jones was an engraver born in 1819 in Liverpool, England and died in 1900 in New York City. He also made portrait and landscape paintings. In the 1890s he was employed at the American Bank Note Company in New York. He was the artist and engraver of the 1890 Postage stamp that honored Thomas Jefferson.
His formal instruction began around 1796, when he became apprenticed to Edward Savage. He also spent times with David Edwin, an English engraver also employed by Savage. Jarvis moved to New York in 1801 with Edward Savage. Within a year he was working on his own as an engraver. In 1803 he entered into a partnership with Joseph Wood.
He started working as an engraver while in law school. He quit his work in law and became a full-time artist.
Jan de Bisschop, also known as Johannes Episcopius (1628–1671), was a lawyer, who became a Dutch Golden Age painter and engraver.
Mountain landscape with two travelers (1698–1701) Teodor Lubieniecki (ca. 1654, Czarkowy – 1718, Nowy Korczyn) was a Polish baroque painter and engraver.
These included the Scottish engraver James Tassie and Dublin medallist William Mossop. He died at his home on St. Stephen's Green, Dublin.
François Hutin's 'Woman in an armchair', National Museum, Warsaw, 1750s François Hutin (1686 - August 1758) was a French painter, sculptor and engraver.
Geoffrey Heath Wedgwood, ARCA, RE (6 April 1900 – June 1977) was a British etcher and engraver, best known for his architectural etchings.
Louis Peter BoitardAlso given as Louis Philippe Boitard, Tate Gallery. (fl. 1750) was a French engraver and designer, who worked in London.
Portrait of Christian Ludwig von Hagedorn after Anton Graff Johann Friedrich Bause (3 January 1738 – 5 January 1814) was a German engraver.
Commercial Docks, Rotherhithe, London (engraved after unknown artist, 1827) George Cooke (22 January 1781 – 27 February 1834), was an English line engraver.
Engraved portrait of Adriaan Pars, by Zijlevelt Anthony van Zijlvelt (1640s, Amsterdam - 1700s, Amsterdam), was a Dutch Golden Age engraver and painter.
The Actress' Family Karl Jakob Theodor Leybold (19 March 1786, Stuttgart - 20 July 1844, Stuttgart) was a German painter, engraver and lithographer.
He was the father of Jan, Theodor and Adriaen Matham, the latter of whom was a notable engraver in his own right.
The Liberty Cap half cent was designed not by Wright, however, but by Chief Engraver of the United States Mint, Robert Scot.
Edward Goodall (1795 – 1870) was an English line engraver. He is now best known for his plates after J. M. W. Turner.
Francis Allen () was a German engraver who executed the frontispiece to the book Dialogus D. Urbani Regi (or Regii?), dated Lübeck, 1652.
Untitled piece (1800) by Thomas Burke. The Graf von Galen Collection.Thomas Burke (1749 – 31 December 1815) was an Irish engraver and painter.
Eugène Viala (before 1900) Eugène Viala (8 September 1859, Salles-Curan - 5 March 1913, Salles-Curan) was a French watercolorist and engraver.
Georges-Charles Dufresne (23 November 1876, Millemont - 8 August 1938, La Seyne-sur-Mer) was a French painter, engraver, sculptor and decorator.
Gilvan Samico (June 15, 1928 – November 25, 2013) was a painter, teacher and Brazilian engraver of the Armorial Movement of graphic design.
Lionello Balestrieri (12 September 1872October 24, 1958) was an Italian painter and engraver, active in various styles mainly in Paris and Naples.
Self-portrait with his family Hendrik Spilman (1721, Amsterdam - 1784, Haarlem), was an 18th-century painter and engraver from the Northern Netherlands.
Harry Morley (5 April 1881 – 18 September 1943) was a British painter, etcher and engraver known for his classical and mythological compositions.
Caricature portrait of Hecht by anonymous artist Wilhelm Hecht (28 March 1843 - early March 1920) was a German wood engraver and etcher.
Otakar Španiel (born on 13 June 1881 in Jaroměř, died on 15 February 1955 in Prague) was a Czech sculptor and engraver.
XI (Meteorology) and Vol. XXIII (Hydrography). Alfred Thomas Agate, engraver and illustrator, was the designated portrait and botanical artist of the expedition.
George Clint (12 April 1770 – 10 May 1854) was an English portrait painter and engraver, especially notable for his many theatrical subjects.
François-Alexandre Verdier (c. 1651 - 1730) was French painter, draftsman and engraver. He was a student and assistant of Charles Le Brun.
George Housman Thomas (London December 17, 1824 – Boulogne-sur-Mer July 21, 1868), was an English engraver, illustrator and Victorian era painter.
Pastoral scene published by the Eragny Press in London Esther Bensusan Pissarro (1870–1951) was a British wood-engraver, designer, and printer.
Edgar Chahine (: 31 October 1874, in Vienna – 18 March 1947, in Paris) was a French painter, engraver, and illustrator of Armenian descent.
Anna Maria Thelott (1683–1710) was a Swedish artist. She was an engraver, an illustrator, a woodcut-artist, and a miniaturist painter.
Oxford University Press. Web. 31 Jan. 2014. (1558–1633) was a Flemish painter and engraver who mainly painted religious works and landscapes.
Joseph Nutting (1660–1722) was an English engraver, working in London. He is known for his portraits, often used as book frontispieces.
Krzysztof Lubieniecki or Christoffel Lubienietzky (1659-1729) was a Polish Baroque painter and engraver active in Amsterdam during the Dutch Golden Age.
Zelma Muriel Blakely (26 November 1921 - 6 September 1978) was a British painter, printmaker and engraver who illustrated a number of books.
Sokrat Maksimovich Vorobyov (; 12 February 1817, in Saint Petersburg – 9 September 1888, in Turmantas) was a Russian landscape painter, engraver and art teacher.
Moritz Dessauer was a Dutch Jewish engraver who worked in Amsterdam. Like Abraham Lion Zeelander, he was a member of the Amsterdam Academy.
Charles Pye Jr. (Birmingham 1777-1864) was a British engraver from Birmingham. He illustrated topographical subjects, and published a Holy Family after Michelangelo.
Annotated engraving of Jacopo Inghirami by Giulio Traballesi, 1763 Giulio or Giuliano Traballesi or Trabellesi (1727–1812) was an Italian designer and engraver.
Edward Dayes (1763 in London – 1804 in London) was an English watercolour painter and engraver in mezzotint. Edward Dayes, self-portrait from 1801.
Romeyn de Hooghe (bapt. 10 September 1645 - 10 June 1708) was an important and prolific late Dutch Baroque, painter, sculptor, engraver and caricaturist.
Catherine of Braganza, mezzotint, 1672, after Peter Lely. Abraham Blooteling (or Bloteling) (1634–1690)Amsterdam city archive was a Dutch designer and engraver.
James Bateman (22 March 1893 – 2 August 1959) was an English painter and engraver specialising in agricultural topics, rural subjects and pastoral landscapes.
Nora Lavrin, née Fry (1897 - 30 August 1985), was an English engraver, book illustrator and painter. She illustrated twenty editions of children's books.
Jean-François Cars (16 October 1661, Lyon, France – 30 August 1738, Paris, France), was a French engraver, printer, publisher and printseller from Lyon.
John Hunter, stipple engraving by James Mitan, 1805, after G. Slous James Mitan (13 February 1776 - 16 August 1822) was a British engraver.
Martyrdom of Saint Lawrence, San Lorenzo, Sansepolcro Giovanni Battista Mercati (1591–1645) was an Italian painter and engraver, active in a Baroque style.
Bernkastel, 1634 Johann Wilhelm Dilich, architect in Frankfurt, engraved portrait from 1636 Sebastian Furck or Fulcarus (c.1589–1666) was a German engraver.
Plan of Paris published by Melchior Tavernier in 1630 Melchior Tavernier (1594–1665) was a French engraver, printmaker and print publisher.British Museum 2012.
Richard Albin Ranft (18 July 1862 – 13 June 1931) was a Swiss post- impressionist portrait and landscapes painter, engraver, illustrator and poster artist.
Jan Pietersz. Zomer (1641–1726) (Nicolaas Verkolje, 1717) Jan Pietersz van Zomer (1641–1724) was a Dutch Golden Age engraver and art collector.
Sofia Carolina Ahlbom (25 November 1803 – 8 June 1868) was a Swedish drawing artist, engraver, lithographer, photographer, map maker, writer, poet and feminist.
Francisco de Matos Vieira, better known as Vieira Lusitano (4 October 1699 – 13 August 1783) was a Portuguese court painter, illustrator and engraver.
Monique de Roux Monique de Roux (born 1946 in Boulogne-Billancourt) is a French painter and engraver. She lives and works in Spain.
1906 Romanian stamp printed by Bradbury, Wilkinson Bradbury Wilkinson & Co were an English engraver and printer of banknotes, postage stamps and share certificates.
John Ray Sinnock (July 8, 1888 – May 14, 1947) was the eighth Chief Engraver of the United States Mint from 1925 to 1947.
Angelo Campanella (born c. 1748 – c. 1815) was an Italian painter and engraver. He was born at Rome, and trained under Giovanni Volpato.
John Alexander (1686 – c.1766) was a Scottish painter and engraver of the 18th century. He studied in Italy under Giuseppe Bartolomeo Chiari.
Hyacinthe Rigaud painting his wife, after an autoportrait by Rigaud, 1742 Jean Daullé (18 May 1703 – 23 April 1763) was a French engraver.
Pietro Ducros (1745 - February, 1810) was a Swiss-Italian painter and engraver active in Rome.Dizionario biografico universal, By Gottardo Garollo, 1907, page 707.
Portrait of Cornelis Coning by Frans Hals, 1630 Cornelis Coning or Koning (1601 - 3 April 1671), was an engraver and mayor of Haarlem.
Theodor Aman (20 March 1831 – 19 August 1891) was a Romanian painter, engraver and art professor. He mostly produced genre and history scenes.
François Couperin, composer. Etching by Jean-Jacques Flipart, 1735, after painting by André Boüys Jean Jacques Flipart (1719–1782) was a French engraver.
Rocco's son, Giacomo Orgiazzi was an engraver and cartographer.Istoria della vercellese letteratura ed arti, by Gaspare De Gregory. Parte prima, page 382-383.
Lillie Harris (born 1994) is a contemporary British composer, copyist and engraver. Born in Canterbury, she is now based in south-east London.
Nemesio Antúnez Zañartu (Born in Santiago, May 4, 1918 - May 19, 1993) was an influential Chilean painter and engraver who founded Workshop 99.
Hubertine Heijermans is a figurative painter, a multi-plate etching artist, Swiss printmaker and engraver, living in Canton de Vaud, Switzerland since 1958.
Giuseppe Marrubini or Marubini (1815–1880) was an Italian painter and engraver of the 19th century, active in painting historic and sacred subjects.
Médaille de Sainte-Hélène designed by Barre Albert Désiré Barre (Paris 6 May 1818 – 29 December 1878), was a French engraver, medalist, and the 18th Chief Engraver of the Paris Mint from 27 February 1855 to his death. He was the son of Jacques-Jean Barre who preceded him as the Chief Engraver.Désiré-Albert Barre, Graveurs Généraux et particuliers des Monnaies de France, Contrôleurs Généraux des Effigies, Noms de quelques graveurs en Médailles de la Renaissance Française, Paris, 1867. His brother Jean-Auguste Barre, a French sculptor and medalist, succeeded him as Chief Engraver after his death in Paris.
"Garden of Holland", allegorical engraving by Galle of a woman dressed in the manner of Kenau Simonsdochter Hasselaer Galle was born in Haarlem in the Netherlands, where he was a pupil of the humanist and engraver Dirck Volkertsz. Coornhert. According to the RKD, he married Catharina van Rollant on 9 June 1569. They had five children who later became active as artists: Theodoor, Cornelis, Philips II, Justa (who married the engraver Adriaen Collaert) and Catharina (who married the engraver Karel de Mallery).Philips Galle in the RKD In Haarlem he engraved several works of the Haarlem painter Maarten van Heemskerck.
Svante Nilsson remained in Paris. He collaborated with the Swedish medal engraver Sven Kulle (1860–1945),Sven Kulle in Konstnärslexikonett Amanda (Swedish)Sven Kulle, Swedish artist, medal engraver and coin engraver (Swedish) who resided in Paris in France. Sven Kulle had established a studio in Paris in 1891 where, among others, Svante Nilsson was employed. At the same time Nilsson also studied at École des Arts Décoratifs, a public university of art and design in Paris, the school is one of the most prestigious French grande école, and at Académie Colarossi, another art school in Paris.
Both of his uncles, Isaac Mijtens and Daniël Mijtens, were painters, and his son Cornelis became an engraver.[ Johannes Mytens biography in De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen (1718) by Arnold Houbraken, courtesy of the Digital library for Dutch literature This statement has often been repeated by various art historians, but unfortunately, Houbraken mixed up his notes on this artist with his notes on Jan Meyssens, the engraver. This Jan Mytens did not have a son Cornelis who was a good engraver. That was Jan Meyssens (and the Meyssens lived in Antwerp, not the Hague).
There is extant documentation showing that Gobrecht worked for the Mint as early as 1823 immediately upon the death of the first chief engraver Robert Scot. This was only a temporary appointment until a new chief engraver William Kneass was hired in January 1824. He also engraved and sold letter and numeral punches to the Mint from this point forward and provided a pattern die to the United States Mint in 1826 (of which no examples exist). He became not an assistant but a "Second" engraver in September 1835 after Kneass suffered a debilitating stroke on August 27 of that year.
Samuel William Reynolds self-portrait Sir Frederick Pollock, 1st Baronet (1783-1870) Samuel William Reynolds (4 July 1773 – 13 August 1835)Royal Academy of Arts Collections was a mezzotint engraver, landscape painter and landscape gardener. Reynolds was a popular engraver in both Britain and France and there are over 400 examples of his work in the National Portrait Gallery, London.
He was born in Boston to engraver Timothy House and his wife, a pianist. House composed an orchestral piece at the age of fourteen, and four years later began writing for the Boston Courier as the publication's music and drama critic. House also worked as a banknote engraver. In 1858, he left the Courier for Horace Greeley's New York Tribune.
Juengling was born in Leipzig, Germany. He obtained a common school education until the age of 14 in Leipzig. Juengling then worked as an apprentice to an engraver in Berlin before emigrating to the United States in 1866. He studied painting at the Art Students' League in New York City, adopted art as a profession, and attained much recognition as a wood engraver.
Gérard Jollain (first mentioned 1660, buried 28 May 1683) was a copper engraver. Bénézit gives his name as Gérard Jolin (or Jollain) and says he resided on the Rue Saint-Jacques in Paris under the shop sign Ville de Cologne and was the father of François-Gérard Jollain (next). François Jollain (ca. 1641 – 18 April 1704) was a copper engraver.
Alphaeus Philemon Cole (Jersey City, New Jersey July 12, 1876 - New York City, November 25, 1988) was an American artist, engraver and etcher. He was born in Jersey City, New Jersey, and died in New York City. He was the son of noted engraver Timothy Cole.Alphaeus Cole, a Portraitist, 112, obituary by Michel Kimmelman, November 26, 1988, The New York Times.
Alfred Johannot. Aged Man Receiving Communion, by Alfred Johannot, 1831, Walters Art Museum Alfred Johannot (March 21, 1800 – 1837) was a French painter and engraver born in Offenbach, Germany. His family were French refugees who went to Germany after the Edict of Nantes was revoked. He started out as an engraver, and then came into being a professional painter in 1831.
Susanne Maria von Sandrart (10 August 1658 in Nuremberg – 20 December 1716 in Nuremberg) was a German artist and engraver. She was the daughter of engraver Jacob von Sandrart, and most of her work was produced for his workshop. At a young age, Von Sandrart began to learn different means of graphic art, producing artwork from her father's home studio. tusche on paper.
The engraver has been identified as Pierre Edelestand Stanislas Dulos (1820-1874). Dulos, as his name is correctly spelled, was a highly skilled technical engraver and the inventor of a chemical process to produce recess or relief engraving plates, and engraved many French revenue stamps.Farley P. Katz, "Dulos, not Duloz: Pierre Edelestand Stanislas Dulos," The Levant Vol. VI, No. 3 (Sept.
His daughter married Henry Wyatt, the painter; his son, William Raphael Eginton, succeeded to his father's business, and in 1816 was appointed glass- stainer to Princess Charlotte. His brother, John Eginton, was a noted stipple engraver. His nephew, also called Francis Eginton, was also a notable engraver. Eginton died on 26 March 1805, and was buried in Old Handsworth churchyard.
Edward Gallaudet was the twelfth son of Peter Wallace Gallaudet the personal secretary to US President George Washington while his office was in Philadelphia. Peter Wallace Gallaudet was the nephew of Elisha Gallaudet, the engraver of the first US coin, the 1776 Continental Dollar. Gallaudet was an apprentice engraver in Hartford Connecticut. He then moved to Boston where he worked with John Cheney.
"Capri" Fenn was born at Richmond, near London, England in 1837. Fenn started as a wood engraver, serving and apprenticeship with the firm, Dalziel of London. He soon turned to drawing for illustration and watercolor painting. In 1857 he made a trip to the U.S. to see the Niagara Falls and settled in New York where he worked first as a wood engraver.
Giulio Bonasone (c. 1498 - after 1574) (or Giulio de Antonio Buonasone or Julio Bonoso) was an Italian painter and engraver born in Bologna. He possibly studied painting under Lorenzo Sabbatini, and painted a Purgatory for the church of San Stefano, but all his paintings have been lost. He is better known as an engraver and is believed to have trained with Marcantonio Raimondi.
Gaetano Stefano Bartolozzi (1757–1821) was an Italian engraver, art dealer, and merchant. He was the a son of the famous engraver Francesco Bartolozzi, a friend of Joseph Haydn, the husband of the outstanding pianist Theresa Jansen, and the father of the celebrated actress and theatre manager Lucia Elizabeth Vestris. For more information on his life, see Theresa Jansen Bartolozzi.
Michael Ford (died October 1758?), was an Irish mezzotint engraver. A native of Dublin, Ford had been a pupil of engraver John Brooks. When Brooks left Ireland around 1747, Ford set up shop as his successor in a store on Cork Hill. There, he engraved a number of portraits in mezzotint, which on account of their scarcity are highly valued by collectors.
Marie Cathérine Riollet (1755 – 1788) was a French engraver. Landscape with Hunters after a painting by Jan Wijnants for the Cabinet de M. Poullain, c. 1780-1781 Riollet was born in Paris and is known for engravings after popular painters, mostly for catalogs. She married late and became the third wife of fellow engraver Jacques Firmin Beauvarlet, but died the next year.
Johann Georg Wille; portrait by Jean-Baptiste Greuze (1763) Johann Georg Wille, or Jean Georges Wille (5 November 1715, der Obermühle am Dünsberg, District of Giessen – 5 April 1808, Paris) was a notable German engraver active in Germany and France.Ro Gallery: Brief Biography His son was the artist Pierre-Alexandre Wille (1748-1837). The engraver Juste Chevillet was one of his pupils.
Orme was an engraver and painter. One of his portraits was exhibited at the Royal Academy of Arts in 1801. He did 700 etchings or paintings, some of which are in the permanent collection of the National Portrait Gallery. He was an engraver to King George III from 1799 to 1820, and to the Prince of Wales from 1799 to 1830.
Charles Hill (1824 – 16 September 1915) was an engraver, painter and arts educator in South Australia. The Proclamation of South Australia 1836, Charles Hill.
Alessandro Zaffonato (active 1730) was an Italian engraver of the late-Baroque period. He engraved Raphael's Judgment of Solomon and a few other plates.
Agnes Miller Parker (1895–1980) was an engraver and illustrator. Born in Ayrshire, she spent most of her career in London and southern Britain.
Paolo Toschi by his pupil Carlo Raimondi. Paolo Toschi (1788 – 30 July 1854) was an Italian draughtsman and engraver. He was born in Parma.
Benedetto (Betto) Lotti (Taggia, July 12, 1894 - Como, 1977) was an Italian painter and engraver who belonged to the art movement called Novecento Italiano.
John Simon (1675?–1751) was an Anglo-French engraver, known for his mezzotint portraits. Engraving of Mary Montagu, Duchess of Montagu, after Charles d'Agar.
Peter Filatreu Cross (October 6, 1815 – October 13, 1862) was an assistant engraver to James B. Longacre at the U.S. Mint in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Fritz A. Baumgartner was the company's key hand engraver from 1906 in the Ludington factory. Other hand engravers were Emil Allemann and Otto Starke.
John of Rokycan, engraved portrait Johann Balzer (6 August 1738 – 14 December 1799) was an 18th-century Czech engraver in the Kingdom of Bohemia.
John Taylor (1840-1891) was a 19th-century Dunston born songwriter and poet (whose material won many prizes) and an accomplished artist and engraver.
Annabel A Kidston (1896–1981) was a Scottish artist who painted in both oil and watercolours and was also an etcher, engraver and illustrator.
Doris Boulton later Doris Boulton-Maude, (1892-1961) was a British artist, notable as a wood engraver, etcher and for her colour woodcut prınts.
Maria Tesselschade Roemers Visscher, also called Maria Tesselschade Roemersdochter Visscher or Tesselschade (25 March 1594 - 20 June 1649) was a Dutch poet and engraver.
Landscape with Shepherdess and Herd at a Watering Hole, etching, 1760s(?) Domenico Bernardo Zilotti (ca. 1730 - ca. 1780 or 1795) was a Venetian engraver.
Joseph John Jenkins (1811 - 9 March 1885) was a British engraver and watercolor painter. He is best known for his portraits and landscapes paintings.
Henry Moses (1781–1870) was an English engraver. He was born 8 May 1781 at Marylebone and died at Cowley, Middlesex, 28 February 1870.
John Entick, portrait from 1763. Guillaume Philippe Benoist (1725–70) was a French engraver, who spent the later part of his life in England.
Geneva: J.-G. Fick, 1876. – P. 246. In 1794 she married the miniaturist and engraver Nicolas Schenker, with whom she would have two children.
Ephraim W. Bouvé (1817-1897) was an engraver in Boston, Massachusetts, in the 19th century.Boston Directory. 1848.Boston Athenaeum. Catalog records for E.W. Bouve.
The President of the Republic's heart break], Timbres magazine #88, March 2008, pages 26-27. Nicolas Sarkozy chose the project of engraver Yves Beaujard.
Jewish Security Guard, an 1831 engraving by Fryderyk Krzysztof Dietrich Fryderyk Krzysztof Dietrich (; 1779–1847) was a German-born Polish engraver and civil servant.
Francesco Bruni (born c. 1660 at Genoa) was an Italian engraver. He engraved a plate of The Assumption of the Virgin after Guido Reni.
Thomas Stephen Attwood, minister of Hammersmith. This is presumed to be one of his last works. His daughter Martha also practised as an engraver.
Grenier is credited with having designed the 'dolphin badge' worn by qualified submariners in the Royal Navy. In retirement he became a glass engraver.
Agostino Campanella (active 1770) was an Italian painter and engraver. He was born in Florence. He engraved several prints representing historical and biblical subjects.
Domenico Maria Bonavera (c. 1650- ??) was an Italian engraver. He was born in Bologna. He trained in engraving with his uncle Domenico Maria Canuti.
Medal of Charles III of Spain, 1759 Tomas Francisco Prieto (1716 in Salamanca – December 19, 1782 in Madrid) was a Spanish engraver and medallist.
Edward Bierstadt (September 11, 1824 – June 15, 1906) was a photographer of portraits and landscapes as well as an engraver in the United States.
Luigi Basiletti, Il Tempio delle Sibilla a Tivoli Luigi Basiletti (April 18, 1780 – January 25, 1859) was an Italian painter, engraver, architect, and archeologist.
Simone Felice was a 17th-century Italian engraver, who, together with Giovanni Battista Falda, engraved a collection of prints, entitled Le Giardini di Roma.
The Theodor Aman Museum is a museum in Bucharest dedicated to the life and work of Romanian painter, engraver and art professor Theodor Aman.
Carlo Bozzoni (c. 1605-1657) was an Italian painter of the Baroque period. He trained with his father, the painter and engraver, Luciano Bozzoni.
François-Rolland Elluin (May 5, 1745 in Abbeville - c. 1810 in Paris) was a French engraver, notoriously known for his illustrations of erotic scenes.
Ménagerie at Versailles by Antoine Aveline Antoine Aveline (1691–1743) was a French engraver, son of Pierre Aveline and brother of Pierre-Alexandre Aveline.
Richard Brookshaw (1748 – in or after 1779)Dates according to the Oxford DNB. was an English mezzotint engraver. Marie Antoinette, engraving from the 1770s.
After a short period with Bond and Chandler, he formed a partnership with another engraver and formed a business partnership with him in 1866.
15, no. 1 (1993), 12-24. He continued working as an engraver and maker of scale models until his departure from America in 1878.
Pietro Santi Bartoli, engraving Nero Circus, 1699. Pietro Santi Bartoli (also Sante or Santo; 1635 - 7 November 1700) was an Italian engraver, draughtsman and painter.
Giovanni Temini was an Italian engraver of the Baroque period. His name is affixed to a portrait of Carlo Gonzales, Duke of Mantua, dated 1622.
Schizanthus pinnatus from Joseph Harrison's "The Floricultural Cabinet and Florist's Magazine" Thomas Orlando Sheldon Jewitt (1799 – 30 May 1869) was a British architectural wood-engraver.
By his wife, Lucy Jones, Tomkins had a large family, including a daughter Emma, who practised as an artist and married Samuel Smith the engraver.
France 25 centimes by Patey 1904 Henri Auguste Jules Patey (9 September 1855, Paris – June 1930, Paris) was a French sculptor, medallist and coin engraver.
Cattle piece, 1670. Abraham van Calraet, or Kalraat (7–12 October 1642, Dordrecht – 11 June 1722, Amsterdam) was a Dutch Golden Age painter and engraver.
James Godby (1767-1849) was a British stipple engraver. In the early 19th century, he was living at 25 Norfolk Street, near the Middlesex Hospital.
Frederick Stacpoole (1813 - 19 December 1907 London) was a British engraver, who produced reproductions of some of the most popular paintings of the Victorian period.
Domenico Rossetti (c. 1650–1736) was an Italian painter and engraver active mainly in Verona. He was known for his wood engravings and acquaforte paintings.
Two Lutheran churches and two Synagogues of Amsterdam Anna Folkema (22 May 1695 - 8 October 1768), was an 18th-century engraver from the Northern Netherlands.
Faithorne's son, William Faithorne the younger (1656–86), was a promising mezzotint engraver, but became idle and dissipated, and involved his father in financial difficulties.
Schuttersstuk by Frans Hals in 1627 showing Adriaen Matham as ensign Adriaen Matham (1590–1660) was a Dutch Golden Age painter, engraver and art dealer.
Diego Hurtado de Mendoza, after El Escorial, main façade José Gómez de Navia (1757, San Ildefonso - after 1812, Madrid) was a Spanish engraver and draftsman.
Ferdinand Victor Léon Roybet (12 April 1840 – 11 April 1920) was a French painter and engraver; best known for his historical and costume genre scenes.
Portrait of Virginia governor John M. Patton, by Martin John Blennerhassett Martin (September 5, 1797 - October 27, 1857), was an American painter, engraver and lithographer.
Ada Jane Macnab (1889–1980) known as Chica Macnab, and later as Ada Munro, was a Scottish artist notable as a wood-engraver and painter.
Manuel Zorrilla de la Torre (26 April 1919 – 12 May 2015) was an Argentinian painter, illustrator, engraver, drawer, and sculptor. His parents were Spanish immigrants.
A portrait of Robbie Burns was given to the club by the famous engraver William Walker. The print is now property of the British museum.
Jesus and St John the Baptist in their Childhood, after a design by Rubens Christoffel Jegher (1596, Antwerp - 1652, Antwerp), was a Flemish Baroque engraver.
The local school (J-C Gatinot) was decorated by painter Maurice Boitel. The engraver Paul-Marcel Dammann (1885–1939) was born and died in Montgeron.
Watts, William, 1752-1851, engraver. Lleweni Hall, published c.1775 The bleach works at Lleweni Remains in 2006. It is now used as a farmhouse.
White was engraver for Andrew Snape's The Anatomy of an Horse first published in 1683. The images were taken from earlier woodcuts by Carlo Ruini.
Marie-Antoinette au Tribunal révolutionnaire, after a painting of Paul Delaroche. Alphonse François (25 August 1814, Paris - 7 July 1888, Paris) was a French engraver.
Baldassare Gabbugiani was an Italian engraver. He executed some of the plates for the Museo Fiorentino, published at Florence between the years 1747 and 1766.
Faust's Easter Stroll (1864) Otto Schwerdgeburth (5 March 1835, Weimar - 22 December 1866, Weimar) was a German painter and engraver who mainly painted historical subjects.
Pierre Petit A Walk in the Forest Auguste Allongé (19 March 1833, Paris - 4 July 1898, Bourron-Marlotte) was a French painter, illustrator and engraver.
William Holl, drawing c.1830 William Holl, the elder (1771–1838) was an English engraver, thought to be of German background, and a political radical.
Giuseppe Maria Rolli or Roli (1645-17 November, 1727) is an Italian painter and engraver active during the Baroque period, mainly in his native Bologna.
Peter Christian Winsløw (1708 – c. 1756), also referred to as Peder Christensen Winsløw, was a Danish medal engraver. He was part of the Winsløw family.
John Camillus Hone returned to Dublin in 1790 and was appointed to the office 'Engraver of Dies' by the Lord-Lieutenant the Earl of Westmorland.
Portrait of John Burnet by William Simson, 1841 John Burnet (March 1781 or 20 March 1784 – 29 April 1868) was a Scottish engraver and painter.
Ioannis Oikonomou; from Pinakothiki magazine (1902) The Art Critic (1885) Ioannis Oikonomou (; 1860, Kertezi - 1931 Athens) was a Greek painter, xylographer, engraver and amateur athlete.
He then settled in St. Gallen, where he worked primarily as a landscape painter and engraver. Most of his photographic work has not been preserved.
Sydney Campbell Smith (25 February 1925 – 13 July 2015), generally known as Campbell Smith, was a New Zealand playwright, poet, wood engraver and arts administrator.
Yvonne Skargon (1931-2010), was a British wood engraver, watercolorist, and typographer who was best known for her work related to botanical and culinary subjects.
Johan Martin Preisler (14 March 1715 in Nuremberg - 17 November 1794 in Copenhagen) was a German engraver, most notable for his work in Denmark. He was the son of the painter Johannes Daniel Preisler (1666 – 1737) and Anna Felicitas (née Riedner), making him the younger brother of the painter Johann Justin Preisler and the painter and engraver Georg Martin Preisler. The family came from Bohemia.
Upon his return from Italy he became in 1610 a master of the Antwerp Guild of St. Luke. Later when Barbé was involved in judicial action against the engraver Nicolaas Lauwers for infringement of privileges relating to prints he had created, he received the support of Rubens. Barbé married Christien (or Christina) Wierix, the daughter of the prominent engraver and publisher Hieronymus Wierix on 30 March 1620.
He printed about thirteen works. In the preface to Halhed's works Wilkins is lauded for having been metallurgist, engraver, founder and printer. He also exemplified how good printing is actually a collaborative exercise. The well known gem-and-seal engraver Joseph Shepherd, as well as the Bengali blacksmith Panchanan Karmakar, were employed to help him with the designing and cutting of types, and the casting of fonts.
In 1814 he was in partnership with Michael Thomson operating at 14 Bury Street in the Bloomsbury District and later was listed at 18 Bury Street. Hall is credited with "almost certainly" being the first engraver to use steel plates in map engraving. Hall died in 1831 at the age of 42. The business was carried on by map engraver Selina Hall, his widow.
Gribelin was born at Blois in 1661, and appears to have been a son of Jacob Gribelin, an engraver, who died at Paris in 1676. After being trained in the art of engraving in Paris, he came to England about 1680. Gribelin had a son who was an engraver, and went as a draughtsman to Turkey in the service of George Hay, 8th Earl of Kinnoull.
Wilson's earliest specimen showing the improved types is dated 1812. Richard Austin died circa 20 August 1832, leaving the foundry to his son George, whom many credited with the innovations in type designs manifest in the Scotch types. Austin's other sons were John Phillips Austin, a music engraver, and Richard Turner Austin (1781-1842), a painter (member of the Royal Academy) and commercial wood engraver.
On January 29, 1824, Kneass was appointed Chief Engraver of the United States Mint. During his tenure as Chief Engraver, he oversaw production of gold coinage, and circulating coinage. In 1830, Kneass redesigned the quarter, and in 1834, redesigned the gold coinage. He also introduced a new Liberty head on the half dollar, a design that was modified several times over the next two years.
On 20 November 1811, Wyon was appointed probationary engraver to the Royal Mint, and was employed in making the bank tokens for England and Ireland, and coins for the British colonies and for Hanover. He also engraved his medal commemorative of the peace and his Manchester Pitt medal. On 13 Oct. 1815 he was appointed chief engraver to the mint, being then only twenty-three.
Jean Chaufourier, a French landscape painter and engraver, was born in Paris in 1675. He married a daughter of the celebrated engraver, Gerard Edelinck, and taught drawing to Mariette. He was received into the Academy in 1735, and died at St. Germain-en-Laye in 1757. There are three of his drawings in the Louvre, and we have a set of eight landscapes engraved by him.
On May 19, 2006, he was appointed Chief Engraver of the U.S. Mint (also known as Supervisor of Design and Master Tooling Development Specialist). The position had been officially vacant for 15 years following the retirement of Elizabeth Jones, the Mint's eleventh Chief Engraver, in 1991. In June 2011, Mercanti became a paid spokesperson for Goldline International and appeared in a television commercial for the company.
Cavalry officer's sabre with Hungarian hilt, offered to Guérin by Kléber, musée historique de Strasbourg. Pierre-Louis Roederer, engraving by Franz Gabriel Fiesinger after a drawing byJean Urbain Guérin. Born in Strasbourg, he was the son of the engraver Jean Guérin of that city. His brother Christophe Guérin (1758-1831) became a painter and engraver, whilst Jean-Urbain's nephew Gabriel-Christophe Guérin (1790-1846) became a painter.
Comocrus behri Arthur Bartholomew (3 December 1833 Bruton, Somerset – 19 August 1909 Melbourne) was an English-born Australian engraver, lithographer and natural history illustrator. He was the son of Thomas Bartholomew, a builder, and Charlotte Wright. Bartholomew was apprenticed to an engraver in Exeter and acquired some lithographic training. He sailed for Australia aboard the Oriental in 1852, arriving in Melbourne in December 1852.
In 1809 he entered the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris where he studied under the sculptor Philippe-Laurent Roland (1746–1816) and the engraver Pierre-Nicolas Beauvallet (1750–1818). His brother Zepherin Ferrez (1797–1851) was also a sculptor and engraver, and also studied at the École des Beaux-Arts. The two brothers spent six months in New York City in 1816–17.
Francis Jukes (1745–1812) was a prolific engraver and publisher, chiefly known for his topographical and shipping prints, the majority in aquatint. He worked alongside the great illustrators of the late eighteenth century. He contributed numerous plates to various publications of rural scenes. His early prints were published in collaboration with Valentine Green, and later worked in collaboration with the engraver and publisher Robert Pollard.
After 1838, he continued his education at the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich, where he became friends with Gottfried Keller, whose works he would later help illustrate. He also studied with the Swiss engraver, Samuel Amsler. From 1846 to 1848, he worked as independent engraver in Paris, working from the same building as Arnold Böcklin and Rudolf Koller. In 1848, he returned to Zürich.
Franke Rupert (In Hungarian literature: Franke Ruppert; 30 October 1888 in Vienna - 1971) was an Austrian graphic and engraver. He worked for the Austro- Hungarian Bank until its liquidation, then for the Hungarian Banknote Printing Co., later for the Oesterreichische Nationalbank. He was the engraver of many pengő banknotes and the designer of the low denomination pengő banknote series of 1938. He also designed Schilling banknotes.
He was a pupil of landscape painter and engraver Jakob Suter at Zofingen, and from 1850 to 1856 of reproduction engraver Julius Thäter at the Munich Academy, and engraved as his first plate “The Stoning of Saint Stephen,” after Schraudolph. His further works include “Lady Macbeth” (1858), after Cornelius; three plates illustrating scenes from the life of Saint Bonifacius, after Hess; and “Aurora” (1887), after Guido Reni.
Selina Hall (1780?–1853) was a British engraver and printer in London who prepared maps for several well-known works including John Gorton's A Topographical Dictionary, Charles Black's 1840 General Atlas and several Chapman & Hall publications. Born Selina Price in Radnorshire around 1780, she was listed as a creditor and beneficiary of London mapmaker and engraver Michael Thomson. In 1821, she married Thomson's business partner Sidney Hall.
Antonio Sandi (9 October 1733 - 4 September 1817) was an Italian engraver, mainly of vedute and maps of Venice and the Veneto. Map of the estate and Villa Querini ad Altichiero on the Brenta (no longer extant). He was born in Puos d'Alpago in the province of Belluno in the Veneto, but lived and worked mainly in Venice. His brother Giuseppe (1763 -1803) was also an engraver.
"Female Portrait", after Jan Kupecký (1667-1740), mezzotint by Bernhard Vogel Bernhard Vogel (19 December 1683 - 13 October 1737) was a German engraver whose main interests were genre scenes and portraits. Vogel was born in Nürnberg. He studied under Weigel and Heisse in Augsburg. In 1745 a number of his engravings after Jan Kupecký were published by the German painter and engraver Valentin Daniel Preissler.
The son of George Bartholomew, engraver (1784–1871), he founded the engraving and mapmaking firm of John Bartholomew and Son Ltd. in 1826. Bartholomew also worked for George Philip & Son. He was a master copper plate engraver and engraved some fine maps for local Edinburgh firms, such as street maps for Lizars, others for the Encyclopædia Britannica and for some educational publishers like A & C Black.
Aurochs Engraving by Giorgio Ghisi, based on drawing by his brother Teodoro Ghisi, Angelica and Medoro, 1570 Teodoro Ghisi (1536–1601) was an Italian painter and engraver of the Renaissance Period, mainly active in his native Mantua. He specialized in paintings of animal and nature scenes. Teodoro was known mostly for his drawings and illustration of animals. His brother Giorgio Ghisi, was a well-known engraver.
From 1774 till 1780 he was an exhibitor of chalk drawings and of engravings in the Royal Academy. Establishing himself in St James's Street as a painter, designer and engraver, he attained popularity and began to mix in fashionable society. His drawing of the "Finding of Moses", a work of but slight artistic merit, which introduced portraits of the princess royal of England and other leading ladies of the aristocracy, hit the public taste, and, as reproduced by his burin, sold largely. In 1785 he succeeded William Woollett as engraver to the king, and he also held the appointment of engraver to the Prince of Wales.
In the play Sardanapalus by Byron, a character named Myrrha appeared, whom critics interpreted as a symbol of Byron's dream of romantic love. The myth of Myrrha was one of 24 tales retold in Tales from Ovid by English poet Ted Hughes. In art, Myrrha's seduction of her father has been illustrated by German engraver Virgil Solis, her tree-metamorphosis by French engraver Bernard Picart and Italian painter Marcantonio Franceschini, while French engraver Gustave Doré chose to depict Myrrha in Hell as a part of his series of engravings for Dante's Divine Comedy. In music, she has appeared in pieces by Sousa and Ravel.
Although this series of paintings are works of art in their own right, their original purpose was to provide the subjects for the series of engraved copper plate prints. When engraving copper plates the image engraved on the plate is a mirror image of the final print. Normally, when undertaking paintings that are to be engraved, the painting is produced the "right way round" — not reversed, and then the engraver views it in a mirror as he undertakes the engraving. Hogarth was an engraver himself and disliked this method, so, unusually, he produced the paintings for Marriage à-la-mode already reversed so the engraver could directly copy them.
After Kneass' stroke, most all pattern and die work was done by Gobrecht from then on, including the Gobrecht Dollars, which were minted briefly in small quantities from 1836 to 1839. Shortly after Kneass' death in 1840, Gobrecht was appointed Chief Engraver of the U.S. Mint on December 21, 1840. During his tenure as Chief Engraver of the Mint, Gobrecht produced perhaps what he is mainly known for, the Seated Liberty dollar, based on sketches by Thomas Sully, and Titian Peale. That design remained on U.S. coinage as late as 1891 Gobrecht died in July 1844; his place as chief engraver was taken by James B. Longacre.
Tardieu's son, Auguste Ambroise Tardieu (1818–1879), was also an artist and a famous forensic medical scholar, who supplied the illustrations for Dr. Pierre François Olive Rayer's three-volume Traité des maladies des reins (1839–41), a treatise on diseases of the kidneys. Neither should be confused with Jean Baptiste Pierre Tardieu, an unrelated French cartographer and engraver active in the early 19th century. Tardieu came from a family boasting a number of fine engravers, and was trained from an early age by his uncle, Pierre Alexandre Tardieu (1756–1844), a leading French engraver. Showing considerable talent in this field, Ambroise persevered and became a celebrated engraver of portraits.
William Brown Macdougall by Frank Mowbray Taubman William Brown Macdougall (16 December 1868 – 20 April 1936) was a Scottish artist, wood engraver, etcher and book illustrator.
Gaston de La Touche (1913?) Gaston La Touche, or de La Touche (24 October 1854 – 12 July 1913), was a French painter, illustrator, engraver and sculptor.
Christian Gottlob Hammer Christian Gottlob Hammer, baptized as Gottlieb, (18 July 1779, Dresden, Saxony – 7 February 1864, Dresden), was an influential German landscape painter and engraver.
Xavier Oriach (born November 20, 1927) is a French painter and engraver from Catalonia. He is best known for his association with the School of Paris.
The novelist, Clorinda Matto de Turner Evaristo San Cristóval (26 October 1848, Cerro de Pasco- 8 December 1900, Lima) was a Peruvian painter, illustrator and engraver.
Self-portrait (1541) The Delphic Sibyl Ludger tom Ring the Elder (c.1496, Münster - 3 April 1547, Münster) was a German painter, engraver and decorative artist.
Sir William Johnston of Kirkhill (1802–1888) was a Scottish engraver, mapmaker and local politician, who served as Lord Provost of Edinburgh from 1848 to 1851.
The Queen of Sheba Giovanni De Min (Belluno, October 24, 1786- Tarzo, November 23, 1859) was an Italian painter and engraver, active in a Neoclassic style.
Octagon barrels (Model 1 - 4). Round barrels (Model 5 - 7). The cylinder scene engraved on the first 25,000 pistols was created by banknote engraver Waterman Ormsby.
Bark and Wood Boring Beetles of the World. Bugwood Network. 2006. They are known commonly as engraver beetles,Cranshaw, W. and D. A. Leatherman. Ips Beetles.
He is sometimes confused with the engraver Pieter Nolpe, who also signed his works "P.N.". His followers were P.D. Bools, and the monogrammists A.V.Z. and L.B.
Robert Coin (1901–1988) was a French sculptor and engraver, born in Saint- Quentin on 17 December 1901. He died in Lille on 12 February 1988.
Auguste-François Michaut, was born in 1786 Paris and died in 1879 Versailles. He was a coin engraver of France and Holland, a medallist and sculptor.
Self-portrait (c.1900) August Friedrich Overbeck, known as Fritz (15 September 1869 in Bremen - 8 June 1909 in Vegesack) was a German painter and engraver.
Giacomo Galli, commonly known as "Lo Spadarino" (1597-1649) was an Italian painter and engraver of the Papal city of Rome in the early seventeenth century.
Ferrando Bertelli, Battle of Lepanto, Vatican Museums, 1572 Ferrando Bertelli (born c. 1525) was an Italian engraver of the Renaissance period. He was born in Venice.
Michele Fanoli (1807 – 19 September 1876) was an Italian painter and engraver,French National Library entry. mainly of religious subjects and portraits in a Neoclassical style.
His son, Jacques Eustache also worked as an artist and engraver, contributing to the later Suites à Buffon. Together father and son produced thousands of illustrations.
Grigor Marzuantsi (; 1662 in Marzuan city in historical Little Hayq in Western Armenia - 1730) was an Armenian book printer and engraver during the years 1705-1730.
Jacques Louis Marin DeFrance, by Ambroise Tardieu (1788-1841) (engraver) Jacques Louis Marin DeFrance (born 22 October 1758, died 12 November 1850) was a French malacologist.
Jean Eric Rehn; portrait by Alexander Roslin (1756) Jean Eric Rehn (18 May 1717, Stockholm - 19 May 1793, Stockholm) was a Swedish architect, engraver and designer.
Ship Combat – Le Vengeur by Yves-Marie Le Gouaz, 1800 Yves-Marie Le Gouaz, (15 February 1742, Brest – 12 June 1816, Paris) was a French engraver.
His son Jules Richomme (1818–1903) was a painter and an engraver. His pupils included Pierre François Eugène Giraud, Charles-Victor Normand and Victor Florence Pollet.
It is not clear that he is related to either Antonio Maria Zanetti the elder or the younger, the famed Venetian engraver and art historian respectively.
Portrait of Friedrich Melchior, Baron von Grimm (engraved by Swaine after Carmontelle) John Swaine (26 June 1775 – 25 November 1860), was an English draughtsman and engraver.
Gérard Audran Gérard Audran (or Girard Audran) (2 August 164026 July 1703), was a French engraver of the Audran family, the third son of Claude Audran.
Pietro Marchioretto (1763 or 1772British Museum Database, birthdate. – May 20, 1828) was an Italian painter and engraver, mainly of rural landscapes, in a late Baroque style.
The Signboard of the Gersaint Gallery by Pierre-Alexandre Aveline, Hermitage Museum, 1732 Pierre-Alexandre Aveline (1702–1760) was a French engraver, portraitist, illustrator, and printmaker.
Pasquale Verrusio (born Rome, Kingdom of Italy, 24 November 1935 – died Torino di Sangro, Italian Republic, 12 February 2012) was an Italian painter, sculptor and engraver.
Nicholas Blakey (died 20 November 1758) was an Irish-born draughtsman and engraver. He produced book illustrations, and designed early examples of scenes from English history.
London: John Murray. Gooden was best known as an engraver, mostly on copper. His designs have been described as finely engraved, witty and inventive.Horne, A. (1994).
Bartolommeo Tutiani was an Italian engraver on wood of the Renaissance period. He completed an engraving of Christ insulted by the Jews, printed in Augsburg in 1515.
Woman spinning with a child in an interior (Dutch: Spinster) Geertruydt Roghman (1625, in Amsterdam – 1657, in Amsterdam), was a Dutch Golden Age painter, engraver, and printmaker.
James Brown (c.1819 - 12 September 1877) was a New Zealand engraver, caricaturist and drawing tutor. He was born in Linlithgow, West Lothian, Scotland on c.1819.
William Woollett, oil on canvas, by Gilbert Stuart, 1783. Tate Britain William Woollett (15 August 173523 May 1785) was an English engraver operating in the 18th century.
Benjamin Senior Godines was a Dutch Jewish engraver who worked in Amsterdam in the 17th century. His father was Jacob Belmonte; his brother, the poet Moses Belmonte.
Robert Nanteuil was official portrait engraver to Louis XIV, and produced over two hundred brilliantly engraved portraits of the court and other notable French figures.Mayor, 289–290.
Hugh Hughes, Portrait of the Artist with his Wife and Daughter (). National Library of Wales, Aberystwyth Hugh Hughes (1790?–1863) was a Welsh painter, engraver and writer.
Mathieu Barathier; by Pascal Barthe The Delights of the Harem Mathieu Barathier (23 March 1784, Narbonne – 6 January 1867, Narbonne) was a French painter, engraver and lithographer.
Richard Austin Artlett (9 November 1807 - 1 September 1873) was a British engraver and painter. He was a pupil of Robert Cooper, and then of James Thomson.
Retrieved 11 February 2016. – 12 July 1797) was a Russian engraver in London known for his work for Robert Sayer (1725-94).Alexander, p. 142.Gabriel Scorodomoff.
Deus faber is the concept of God as a craftsman or an engraver.(English) David Adams Leeming. 1994. A Dictionary of Creation Myths. New York:Oxford University Press.
Robert William Sievier FRS (24 July 1794 – 28 April 1865)Sievier, Robert William (DNB00) was a notable British engraver, sculptor and later inventor of the 19th century.
Raffaello Morghen by Paolo Caronni, 1811 Paolo Caronni (c. 1779-1842) was an Italian engraver. He was born in Monza. He was a pupil of Giuseppe Longhi.
Steele in 1906 Louis John Steele (30 January 1842 - 12 December 1918) was an English-born New Zealand artist and engraver. He was born in Reigate, Surrey.
York Castle (1644, engraving by William Henry Toms) Francis Place (1647 – 21 September 1728) was an English gentleman draughtsman, potter, engraver and printmaker, active mainly in York.
Lumb Stocks (29 November 1812 – 28 April 1892) was a British engraver. In a long career he produced engravings from paintings by notable artists of the day.
Antoine-Alexandre-Joseph Cardon (1739–1822), also known as Cardon the elder to distinguish him from his son Anthony Cardon, was a Belgian painter, portraitist and engraver.
William Turner Davey (1818-1900) was an English artist and engraver who is best known for his reproductions of a number of celebrated Victorian works of art.
John A. O'Neill (c. 1837 - June 17, 1892) was an American steel engraver and Democratic party politician. He served as the 15th Mayor of Hoboken, New Jersey.
He was the son of Gabriel II Tavernier,Préaud et al. 1987, pp. 289–290.Grivel 1996. an engraver who moved from Antwerp to Paris in 1573.
Johann Octavian Salver by Georg Karl Urlaub, 1765 Maria Salver by Georg Karl Urlaub, 1765 Johann Octavian Salver (1732–1788) was a German diplomat, archivist, and engraver.
Archibald Armstrong engraved by Thomas Cecil. Thomas Cecil (fl. 1626 - 1640) was an English engraver who worked entirely with the graver, and whose work flourished about 1630.
Mikhail Petrovich Botkin (; 1839–1914) was a Russian painter, engraver, art collector, archaeologist and philanthropist. Vasily Botkin, the writer, and Sergey Botkin, the physician, were his brothers.
Cornelius Johnson in Het Gulden Cabinet. Adriaen van Nieulandt (1587, Antwerp- buried July 7, 1658, Amsterdam) was a Dutch painter, draughtsman and engraver of the Baroque period.
She also published three memoirs of family members: Memoir of S. W. Cheney (1881), Memoir of John Cheney, Engraver (1888), and Memoir of Margaret S. Cheney (1888).
Svante Nilsson, Svante Edvin Nilsson (10 June 1869 in Stockholm, Sweden – 21 May 1942 in Stockholm) was a Swedish medal engraver, medal artist, lyricist and lute singer.
Marc Ferrez (14 October 1788 – 1 April 1850) was a French sculptor and engraver who spent a large part of his career in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Anton III's death at an even younger age brought an end to the family business, although at least one of the brothers' many daughters married an engraver.
View of San Francisco in 1850, painted in 1878 George Henry Burgess (June 8, 1831 – April 22, 1905) was an English landscape painter, wood engraver and lithographer.
Mary Villiers, Countess of Buckingham, engraved by Stow after George Perfect Harding, 1814 James Stow (born. c. 1770, died in or after 1823), was an English engraver.
Robert Scot was the most prolific engraver of early American patriotic iconography, with symbols and images depicting rebellion, unity, victory, and liberty throughout his career in America.
Engraved portrait of Anna Maria van Schurman after her portrait by Jan Lievens. Jonas Suyderhoef (1613 in Haarlem - 1686 in Haarlem), was a Dutch Golden Age engraver.
Narcisse Berchère (1860s) Narcisse Berchère (11 September 1819, Étampes - 20 September 1891, Asnières-sur-Seine) was a French painter and engraver; best known for his Orientalist works.
Part 1 of a 4-part map of Amsterdam by Pieter Bast, 1599 Pieter Bast (ca 1550 - 17 March 1605) was a Dutch cartographer, engraver and draftsman.
Alphonse Stengelin (1852-1938) was a French painter, engraver, and lithographer who spent much of his life working outside France. He is remembered mostly for his landscapes.
Isaac Jehner (2 December 1750 – 1818) was a painter and engraver who worked in the West Country and London. He changed his name to Jenner in 1806.
George Farmer, drawn by Charles Grignion the Younger, National Portrait Gallery, 1778 Charles Grignion the Younger (1754–1804) was a British history and portrait painter and engraver.
Cruchley's Railway Map of the County of Cornwall &c.;, c. 1850. George Frederick Cruchley (1797-1880) was an English map-maker, engraver and publisher based in London.
There he lies now, in that last quiet house of correction for such mistempered spirits, almost forgotten, even by old printsellers, but as dexterous and graceful engraver.
His elder son of the same name, Samuel William Reynolds Jr. (1794–1872), was also a noted mezzotint engraver and landscape painter. Of his daughters, Elizabeth, an able miniaturist, married engraver William Walker (1791–1877), and Frances exhibited miniatures at the Royal Academy (1828–1830). A small portrait of Reynolds, etched by Edward Bell, was published by A. E. Evans in 1855. Another portrait was painted by his friend Ary Scheffer.
This is the primitive method, its peculiarities being due to a combination of natural genius with technical inexperience. Detail of an engraving by Marcantonio Marcantonio, the engraver trained by Raphael, first practiced by copying German woodcuts into line engravings. Marcantonio became an engraver of remarkable power and through him, the pure art of line-engraving reached its maturity. He retained much of the simple early Italian manner in his backgrounds.
James Bromley (1800–1838), was an English mezzotint-engraver. Bromley was the third son of William Bromley, the line-engraver. Little is known respecting his life. Among his best plates may be enumerated portraits of the Duchess of Kent, after George Hayter; John, Earl Russell, after Hayter; and the Earl of Carlisle, when Lord Morpeth, after Thomas Heathfield Carrick; 'Falstaff,' after Henry Liverseege; and 'La Zingarella,' after Octavius Oakley.
After training at the academies of Ghent and then Brussels, Joseph-Pierre Braemt perfected his craft in Paris with the engraver André Galle and the baron François Joseph Bosio, a renowned sculptor of the time. He was appointed general engraver of the Hôtel des Monnaies in Brussels and produced the first Belgian coins. He was a founding member of the Royal Academy of Science, Letters and Fine Arts of Belgium.
He trained under his father as an apprentice engraver and a heraldic painter, and was taught art by John Crome, who influenced his use of soft greys and pinks in his palette. As a skilled engraver Ninham was capable, according to the author William Dickes, of producing a miniature image of a peacock that was so detailed that individual feathers could be seen with the aid of a magnifying glass.
Auguste Hüssener (1789 - 13 February 1877) was a German engraver and miniature painter. Hüssener was born in Szczecin, Poland, and was a pupil of the engraver Ludwig Buchhorn. In 1814 she became a professor at the Prussian Academy of Arts and was entrusted with the leadership of the Academy's School of Engraving from 1824. At the annual exhibitions of the Academy, Hüssener regularly presented works from 1828 to 1860.
In accordance with the wish of the King, a competition was organized between four Prix de Rome and De Bast, who was the winner. From that time onwards, the direction of the Postal Services stopped to appeal to foreign artists, and De Bast became its appointed engraver. While keeping his office at the Postage Stamps Printing-house, De Bast worked then as a free engraver, realizing works of very high quality.
Moritz Fuerst (March 1782 – 1840) was an American artist of Jewish-Slovak origin. He was born in Pezinok, near Bratislava, and died in Philadelphia. Prior to immigrating, he was enlisted by the American consul at Livorno, Italy, in 1807, and came to the United States to work as an engraver. In 1808 he settled in Philadelphia, where he set up business as a seal and steel engraver and die-sinker.
He studied at the government school of drawing and design in Somerset House, and was apprenticed to Robert Oliver, a silver-plate engraver based in Soho. He travelled to the Continent in October 1852, and was based in Geneva from September 1853, where he worked as a goldsmith's designer and engraver. He returned to England in September 1856, and began engraving for London jewellers. John Lord de Tabley.
Engraving of a beached whale, after Hendrik Goltzius. He was the stepson and pupil of painter and draftsman Hendrik Goltzius, and brother-in-law to engraver Simon van Poelenburgh, having married his sister, Marijtgen. He made several engravings after the paintings of Peter Paul Rubens from 1611-1615, and also a series after the work of Pieter Aertsen. In 1613, engraver Jan van de Velde was apprenticed to him.
The act authorizing the gold dollar and double eagle precipitated conflict at the Philadelphia Mint. There the officers, including Chief Coiner Franklin Peale, were mostly the friends and relations of Director Patterson. The outsider in their midst was Chief Engraver James B. Longacre, successor to Gobrecht (who had died in 1844). A former copper-plate engraver, Longacre had been appointed through the political influence of South Carolina Senator John C. Calhoun.
Peter Wyon (1797-1822) was an engraver of medals and coins. He was born into a family who had a long tradition of dye-engraving. He was the son of George Wyon, as well as the brother of Thomas Wyon, with whom he went into business for a short time. Both his nephew, Thomas Wyon, and his son, William Wyon, held the position of Chief Engraver at the Royal Mint.
Lake George, 1860 John William Casilear (June 25, 1811 – August 17, 1893) was an American landscape artist belonging to the Hudson River School. Casilear was born in New York City. His first professional training was under prominent New York engraver Peter Maverick in the 1820s, then with Asher Durand, himself an engraver at the time. Casilear and Durand became friends, and both worked as engravers in New York through the 1830s.
William Henry Wesley (1841–1922) was an engraver, artist, astronomer and administrator, who worked as assistant secretary of the Royal Astronomical Society from 1875 to his death in 1922.The Times, Monday, 23 October 1922, pg. 12, Issue 43169, col C. Wesley was born at Stapenhill, Staffordshire, England, the son of a printer and publisher. He moved with his family to London in 1855, and became an apprentice to an engraver.
Al-Zarqālī was born in a village near the outskirts of Toledo, the then capital of the Taifa of Toledo. Art from Toledo in Al-Andalus depicting the Alcázar in the year 976.AD He was trained as a metalsmith and due to his burr skills he was nicknamed Al- Nekkach "the engraver of metals". His Latinized name, 'Arzachel' is formed from the Arabic al-Zarqali al-Naqqash, meaning 'the engraver'.
A map by Edward Weller: River System of South India (1886) Edward Weller (1 July 1819 – May 1884) FRGS was a British engraver and cartographer who was one of the first to produce maps using lithography.Edward Weller Geographicus. Retrieved 24 September 2014. He was a "London-based engraver, cartographer and publisher, working from offices in Red Lion Square and later, Bloomsbury", who produced detailed steel plate engraved maps.
He began his studies with his father, who was also an engraver, and continued at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. In 1815, he first attracted attention with his engravings of mythological scenes. He later turned to experimenting with new techniques and became the first steel engraver in Austria. In 1829, he was awarded a patent for a method of printing in color on steel or copper plates.
He traveled to Parma to study the works of Correggio. Accompanied by his brother Annibale, he spent a long time in Venice, where he trained as an engraver under the renowned Cornelis Cort.Carracci at the Catholic Encyclopedia Starting from 1574 he worked as a reproductive engraver, copying works of 16th century masters such as Federico Barocci, Tintoretto, Antonio Campi, Veronese and Correggio. He also produced some original prints, including two etchings.
Details of his early life and training have not survived. He became master of the Antwerp Guild of Saint Luke in 1606. He married Betje van Uden, the sister of the painter Lucas van Uden. The couple had three sons: Erasmus, who would become a painter and engraver, Artus, who would follow in his father’s footsteps and become a sculptor, and Hubertus, who became an engraver and painter.
Caslon was born in Cradley, Worcestershire in 1692 or 1693 and trained as an engraver in nearby Birmingham. In 1716, he started business in London as an engraver of gun locks and barrels and as a bookbinder's tool cutter."History of Printing", British Printing Society Retrieved on 29 April 2014. Having contact with printers, he was induced to fit up a type foundry, largely through the encouragement of William Bowyer.
Kunst was one of the three sons of the painter Cornelis Engebrechtsz who became a painter and glass painter (engraver). His brothers Cornelis Cornelisz Kunst and Lucas Cornelisz de Kock were also painters. He is known for historical allegories, drawings, and glass painting. In 1509 he married Marijtgen Gerritsdr van Dam, with whom he had a son Adriaen Pietersz who became a glass engraver, and a daughter Marijtgen.
Charles Edward Barber (November 16, 1840 – February 18, 1917) was the sixth chief engraver of the United States Mint from 1879 until his death in 1917. He had a long and fruitful career in coinage, designing most of the coins produced at the mint during his time as chief engraver. He did full coin designs, and he designed about 30 medals in his lifetime. The Barber coinage were named after him.
He married Anne Louise, the daughter of the engraver Jacques Chéreau, in 1758 in Paris. He collaborated as an engraver and printseller with his father-in-law. They created a shop that sold wallpapers and prints in 1764 and two years later they had a wallpaper factory. The business appears to have struggled, however, and after making a number of excursions, Huquier left his family behind and moved to England.
Gustav Kruell (October 31, 1843 – January 2, 1907) was a German-born wood engraver portrait artist. He was also founder of the American Wood Engravers' Society in 1881.
Between 1859 and 1870, he illustrated Tennyson's Enoch Arden and Robert Browning's Men and Women, and worked on children's magazine illustrations with engraver Henry Marsh (American, 1826–1912).
John Haynes (fl. 1730–1750) was a British draughtsman and engraver. His life is known only from internal evidence in his works. He was apparently working in York.
Michel Corneille the Elder, Philippe I, Duke of Orléans and brother of Louis XIV Michel Corneille the Elder (c. 1601 – 1664) was a French painter, etcher, and engraver.
Jean-Baptiste Corneille, Charles Boromée caring for the Plague Victims (17th century) Jean-Baptiste Corneille (2 December 1649 – 12 April 1695) was a French painter, etcher, and engraver.
Lala de Cyzique painting, Palace of Versailles, 1672 Michel Corneille the Younger (1642, Paris – 16 August 1708, Gobelins manufactory at Paris) was a French painter, etcher and engraver.
Pellegrino's brother, Domenico Pellegrino Tibaldi was an engraver active in Bologna. Among his pupils were Orazio Samacchini,Bryan, page 442. Lorenzo Sabbatini,Bryan, page 434. and Girolamo Miruoli.
Little is known of Rota's early life or where he trained as an engraver, but most of his documented career was spent working in Venice, Rome, and Vienna.
She was born Doris May Dinham in the Sydney suburb of Woolwich—her parents were English engraver Harry Charles Dinham and his Tasmanian-born wife Ida Margaret Pybus.
Maria Clara Eimmart (27 May 1676 - 29 October 1707), was a German astronomer, engraver and designer. She was the daughter and assistant of Georg Christoph Eimmart the Younger.
Hendrik met de Bles - Lukas Gassel van Helmond - Hans Holbein II, illustration for the Schilderboeck Jan l'Admiral (1699–1773) was an 18th-century engraver from the northern Netherlands.
240px Jean-François de Neufforge (1 April 1714 – 19 December 1791) was a Belgian architect and engraver, known for his Recueil elementaire d'architecture, a book of architectural engravings.
Dionysos Fountain, Cologne Cathedral Hans Karl Burgeff (20 April 1928 - 25 November 2005) was a German sculptor, medal engraver and art lecturer, who worked mostly in the Rhineland.
The paintings were copied by an engraver, and appeared in an edition of Goldsmith's poetry published in the same year by F. J. du Roveray.Roberts 1910, p. 26.
Ludovico Dorigny (1654 - 17 October 1742) was a French painter and engraver. Trained in his native country, he spent most of his life and career in Verona, Italy.
Civilité type (in French: "Caractères de civilité") is a typeface invented in 1557 by the French engraver Robert Granjon. These characters imitate French cursiva letters of the Renaissance.
J. Duncan Gleason (August 3, 1881 - March 9, 1959) was an American engraver, illustrator, and painter who became the "leader of [the] ultraconservative school" in Los Angeles, California.
Marinus Robyn van der Goes (alternative names: Marinus Robin van der Goes, Ignatius Cornelis Marinus, Ignatius Cornelis Marinus) (Goes or London?, 1599 - Antwerp, 1639) was a Flemish engraver.
Paul Grandhomme by Raphaël Collin. Paul Grandhomme was a French medalist, engraver and enameller. Born in Paris in 1851, he died in Saint-Briac-sur-Mer in 1944.
Fernando Selma, by an unknown artist Don Quixote Defeating the Knight of the Mirrors Fernando Selma (1752, Valencia - 8 January 1810, Madrid) was a Spanish engraver and illustrator.
Ceiling of the Grand staircase of the Palais Kinsky in Vienna Carlo Innocenzo Carlone or Carloni (1686–1775) was an Italian painter and engraver, active especially in Germany.
Hendrick Danckerts, Royal Gardener John Rose presenting a pineappel to King Charles II, 1675 Hendrick Danckerts (c.1625 - 1680) was a Dutch Golden Age landscape painter and engraver.
West front of the Nidaros Cathedral, Trondheim, Norway. Drawing by Maschius, 1661. Jacob Mortenssøn Maschius (c.1630 - 12 August 1678) was a Norwegian clergyman, poet and copperplate engraver.
Ferdinand Anton Nicolaus Teutenberg (4 December 1840 - 2 October 1933) was a New Zealand stonemason, carver, engraver, medallist and jeweller. He was born in Hüsten, Germany, in 1840.
Etching of a sculpted bust of Charles Turner Warren by Samuel William Reynolds (1824). Charles Turner Warren (4 June 1762 - 21 April 1823) was an English line engraver.
Henri Jean-Baptiste Victoire Fradelle by Moses Haughton the younger, 1848 Moses Haughton (7 July 1773 – 26 June 1849) was an English engraver and painter, often of miniatures.
Self-portrait (mid-1920s) Émile Laboureur, known as Jean Émile (16 August 1877, Nantes16 June 1943, near Pénestin) was a French painter, designer, engraver, watercolorist, lithographer, and illustrator.
Hector Giacomelli Hector Giacomelli (April 1, 1822 in Paris - December 1, 1904 in Menton), was a French watercolorist, engraver and illustrator, best known for his paintings of birds.
Shepperton, Middlesex William Tombleson (1795 - c. 1846) was an English topographical and architecture artist, illustrator, copper and steel engraver, writer and printmaker, based in London.William Tombleson (German Wikipedia).
Giovanni Volpato (Angelica Kauffman, 1794/5) Giovanni Volpato (1735-1803) was an Italian engraver. He was also an excavator, dealer in antiquities and manufacturer of biscuit porcelain figurines.
Scolytus muticus, known generally as the hackberry engraver or hackberry beetle, is a species of typical bark beetle in the family Curculionidae. It is found in North America.
Forte dos Reis Magos Gillis Peeters (1612 - 1653), was a Flemish painter, draughtsman and engraver who contributed to the development of marine art and landscape painting in Flanders.
Portrait of Nancy Storace by Pietro Bettelini, now in the library of the Goethe University Frankfurt. Pietro Bettelini (6 September 1763 – 27 September 1829) was a Swiss engraver.
Santa Maria al Paradiso. Ferdinando Porta (1689–1767) was an Italian painter of the late-Baroque. Born in Milan. The engraver Francesco Londonio was one of his pupils.
Portrait of Stöber by Karl Vogl, after Friedrich von Amerling (1839) Franz Xaver Stöber (20 February 1795, Vienna - 11 April 1858, Vienna) was an Austrian engraver and etcher.
Zéphyrin Ferrez (or Zepherin Ferrez; 31 July 1797 - 22 July 1851) was a French sculptor and engraver who spent much of his career in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Unfinished self-portrait Jules Migonney (22 February 1876, Bourg-en-Bresse - 5 July 1929, Paris) was a French painter and engraver; known for his portraits and Orientalist scenes.
Jan Rubczak (center) at an exhibition in 1931. Jan Rubczak (18 January 1882, Stanisławów – 27 May 1942, Auschwitz) was a Polish Postimpressionist painter and engraver of Greek ancestry.
Georg Christoph Martini or Giorgio Cristoforo Martini, also called il Sassone (the Saxon) (died December 21, 1745) was a German-Italian painter, engraver, travel writer, archeologist, and antiquarian.
Jean Delpech (1 May 1916 – 1988) was a French painter, engraver and illustrator. He designed and engraved ten stamps for the French Post Office between 1980 and 1988.
Ludwig van Beethoven, Colour lithograph by Blasius Höfel after the drawing by Louis Letronne, 1814 Blasius Höfel (27 May 1792 – 17 September 1863) was an Austrian copper engraver.
Self-portrait (c.1800) Fusillade at Faubourg Saint-Antoine (Réveillon riots) Abraham Girardet (30 November 1764, Le Locle - 2 January 1823, Paris) was a Swiss engraver and illustrator.
His son, Nathaniel S. Dearborn, continued as an engraver and printer in Boston, working on Water Street (ca.1847–1851) and School Street (ca.1857-1868).Boston Directory.
Ruytchi Souzouki (August 2, 1904, Yokohama – 1985, Paris), also written Ryuichi Suzuki (Japanese: 鈴木龍一), was a Japanese painter, decorator, illustrator, lithographer, engraver and art critic.
The parish register of the parish of Saint-Benoit, Paris, shows that Louise- Magdeleine, baptized in 1686, was one of at least six children of Daniel Horthemels, a bookseller, and his wife Marie Cellier. The Horthemels family had come from The Netherlands. Originally Protestants, they became followers of the Dutch Roman Catholic theologian Cornelis Jansen and had links with the Parisian abbey of Port-Royal-des-Champs, the centre of Jansenist thought in France.Louise-Magdeleine Horthemels: Reproductive Engraver by Elizabeth Poulson in Woman's Art Journal, vol. 6, no. 2 (Autumn, 1985 – Winter, 1986), pp. 20–23 Active as a copperplate engraver by 1707, on 10 August 1713 Horthemels married another engraver, Charles-Nicolas Cochin the Elder. There were several more engravers in their extended family, including Cochin's brother Frédéric and the two sisters of Horthemels, Marie-Anne-Hyacinthe (1682–1727), who was the wife of Nicolas-Henri Tardieu (1674–1749), an eminent engraver, a member of the Academy from 1720,Les Forces Mouvantes at georgeglazer.
In 1645 he was appointed by the parliament joint chief engraver along with Edward Wade, and, having executed the great seal of the Commonwealth and dies for the coinage, he was promoted to be chief engraver to the mint and seals. He produced several fine portrait medals of Oliver Cromwell, one of which is copied from a miniature by Samuel Cooper. After the Restoration Simon was appointed engraver of the king's seals. On the occasion of his contest with the brothers John, Joseph and Philip Roettiers, who were employed by the mint in 1662, Simon produced his celebrated crown of Charles II, on the margin of which he engraved a petition to the king.
William Ward), engraved by Edward Williams, published by Thomas Prattent, 1786 Coke and Perkin (after John Hamilton Mortimer), engraved by Edward Williams, published by John Raphael Smith, 1787 Edward Williams (c.1755-1797?) was an engraver who lived in London in the late 1700s, and engraved several prints after Thomas Rowlandson and William Ward. Although a competent engraver, he is remembered primarily for being the father of Edward Williams the Victorian landscape painter. Williams is said to have been born about 1755, though this is not certain, and he is said to have known the celebrated painter and engraver William Hogarth (1697-1764), which would make Williams about 9 years old when Hogarth died.
He was born, according to A. Zanetti, in Milan around 1590 and here he worked as an engraver, draftsman and, perhaps, a painter. He was also cartographic engraver and editor "in the name of Balla"; active in 1617 and again in 1654. Bianchi is registered in 1620 as engraver at the Academy of Fine Arts at the Ambrosiana in Milan. He then worked, almost exclusively, for the most famous Milanese printers and publishers, especially for GB Bidelli, Malatesta, Ponzio: his engravings were accurate and diligent, even if the incisor sign is often uncertain, lists twenty-four of them, drawn from drawings by Domenico Fiasella, Bernardo Castello, Andrea Lanzani, Domenico Piola, Frà Molina, GC Storer, A. Storm.
Marcelo Grassmann (September 23, 1925 - June 21, 2013) was a Brazilian engraver and draughtsman. Initially interested in sculpture, Grassmann became a wood engraver in the 1940s and in the 1950s became famous as a metal engraver and draughtsman. He won several international first prizes, as in the I Salon of Modern Art of Rio de Janeiro (1953), the III Biennale of São Paulo (1955), the XXXI Biennale of Venice (1958)- prize for sacred art, III Biennale for Graphic Arts - Florence (1972). Influenced by Austrian artist Alfred Kubin and Brazilian engravers Oswaldo Goeldi and Livio Abramo, Grassmann soon developed his own style of dreamlike figures including knights, maidens, death, horses, crabs and other fantastic creatures.
Matthew 7:2-5 - The Parable of the Mote and the Beam, ca. 1700 Pieter Mortier (1661-1711) was an 18th-century mapmaker and engraver from the Northern Netherlands.
Anselmo Sacerdote (1868-1926) was an Italian painter, engraver, and photographer. For 23 years, he served as secretary-conservator at the Museo Civico of Turin. He mainly painted landscapes.
Auguste Dubois, painter and engraver (1892–1973) was born at Gresswiller. Between 1920 and 1922 he worked closely with Ettore Bugatti whose automobile factory was located at nearby Molsheim.
Susanna Lister or Susanna Knowler (c. 1670 – 8 March 1738) was a British natural history illustrator and engraver who with her sister, Anne Lister created over 1,000 shell illustrations.
William Elder (fl. 1680-1700), was a Scottish engraver who worked in London, where he was employed mainly by booksellers. William Elder, engraving by Joseph Nutting, after William Faithorne.
Philippe Thomassin was a French engraver and publisher who emigrated to Rome. He was born in Troyes on 28 January 1562 and died on 12 May 1622 in Rome.
Frederick Vezin and his wife, Ida (1895) Frederick Vezin also Fred or Frederik (14 August 1859, Philadelphia - c.1933, Düsseldorf) was an American-born German painter, engraver and lithographer.
Ignace Fougeron, also known as Ignatius Fougeron or J. Fougeron, was a British engraver active from 1750 to 1782. He was likely from a Huguenot family living in London.
Born at Stockholm, he was a pupil and son-in-law of the medal engraver Arvid Karlsteen.Leonard Forrer, Biographical Dictionary of Medallists Vol. 5 (1904),pp. 118–21; archive.org.
Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury by Simon Gribelin, from "Characteristicks of Men, Manners, Opinions, Times" 5th edition, 1732 Simon Gribelin (1661–1733) was a French line engraver.
Ferslew was originally intended for a career as an engraver but following his father's early death he was instead sent to Berlin to apprentice as a lithographer in 1854.
Thomas Lewis Atkinson, Portrait of Giuseppe Garibaldi, 1860. Mezzotint after a painting by Alessandro Ossani. Thomas Lewis Atkinson (4 April 1817 in Salisbury - 1898) was an English reproductive engraver.
General Aubert Dubayet with French officers being received by the Grand Vizier in 1796, painting from 1797. Antoine-Laurent Castellan (1772–1838) was a French painter, architect, and engraver.
The author of this inscription was Kubja, the court-poet of Śāntivarman.D. C. Sircar, p. 86 He engraved the inscriptions himself to prevent any other engraver from committing mistakes.
The Merry Fiddler (1833), engraving by Henry Chawner Shenton after Gerrit Adriaensz. Berckheyde, for the Cabinet Gallery of Allan Cunningham Henry Chawner Shenton (1803–1866) was an English engraver.
William Austin (1721 – 11 May 1820, Brighton) was an English artist, drawing- master, engraver and caricaturist. A rival of Matthew Darly, he used a distinctive grainy, woodblock-like style.
Victor Janvier (1851–1911) was a French sculptor and engraver notable for inventing the Janvier Reducing Machine, a type of lathe which improved the die making process within mints.
View of Brussels Jan Baptist Bonnecroy or Jean Baptiste Bonnecroy (1618 – after 1676) was a Flemish painter and engraver known for his large panoramic city views and marine paintings.
William Roos (1808 – 4 July 1878) was a Welsh artist and engraver. Several of Roos' portraits, mainly of notable Welsh figures, are owned by the National Library of Wales.
One of Lasinio's etchings of frescoes in Camposanto, Pisa, depicting the Last Judgement and Hell Carlo Lasinio (Treviso February 10, 1759 - March, 29, 1838 Pisa ) was an Italian engraver.
Nathaniel Jocelyn (January 31, 1796 – January 13, 1881) was an American painter and engraver best known for his portraits of abolitionists and of the slave revolt leader Joseph Cinqué.
Sebastiano Bianchi was an Italian engraver, active c.1580. He produced plates of devotional subjects. Among others is a print representing the Emblems of our Saviour's Sufferings, with Angels.
Giovanni Agucchi was an Italian engraver of the 16th century Renaissance period. He was a native of Milan. He is known for an engraving of the cathedral of Milan.
Some works of Luis Alberto Solari in Fray Bentos Luis Alberto Solari (n. Fray Bentos, on October 17, 1918 - October 13, 1993) was a painter and engraver from Uruguay.
Johann Conrad Werdmüller; lithograph by Carl Friedrich Irminger (c. 1860) Johann Conrad Werdmüller (10 November 1819, Zürich - 3 September 1892, Freiburg im Breisgau) was a Swiss illustrator and engraver.
Ingres, 1828 Luigi Antoine Josephe Calamatta (21 june 1801 – 8 March 1869 in Milan) was an Italian painter and engraver. He was born at Civitavecchia, in the Papal States.
DeWitt Clinton Baxter (1829–1881) was an American artist and engraver. He also served as colonel and brevet brigadier general in the Union Army during the American Civil War.
Edward Orme (1775-1848) was a British engraver, painter and publisher of illustrated books. He was also a property developer in Bayswater, where Orme Square was named after him.
In 1706 he enrolled with the Guild of Saint Luke in Leiden.Thieme- Becker, vol. 4, p. 116 The leiden etcher and engraver Johannes van der Spyck was his student.
He was also an engraver of great ability and he reproduced many of his own works and also the pictures of other artists. He died in Munich in 1875.
Luisa Rafaela de Valdés Morales, known as Luisa de Morales and Maria Luisa Morales, was a Spanish painter and engraver, and daughter and disciple of Juan de Valdés Leal.
John Thompson's drawing and engraving of the black redstart in William Yarrell's 1843 History of British Birds. Rare signature "Thompson Del et Sc" (Thompson drew and carved this) at lower right of black redstart John Thompson (25 May 1785 – 20 February 1866) was a British wood-engraver. He is best known for his contribution to William Yarrell's 1843 History of British Birds. He was described as the most distinguished wood-engraver of his time.
His younger brother, Charles Thompson (1791–1843), was likewise an engraver. Charles studied under the Newcastle engraver John Bewick, the younger brother of Thomas Bewick; the latter produced the predecessor to Yarrell's handbook, also named History of British Birds (first published 1797–1804). Charles won a gold medal for his illustrations in Paris in 1824. John Thompson's eldest son, Charles Thurston Thompson (1816–1868), followed his father into the wood-engraving profession.
John Young (1755–1825), mezzotint engraver and keeper of the British Institution, was born in 1755, and studied under John Raphael Smith. He became a very able engraver, working exclusively in mezzotint, and executed about eighty portraits of contemporary personages, from pictures by Hoppner, Lawrence, Zoffany, etc., as well as some subject pieces after Morland, Hoppner, Paye, and others. His finest plate is the prize fight between Broughton and Stevenson, after Mortimer.
In this capacity he not simply worked as an engraver of prints but also trained to decorate metal objects, in particular goldsmiths' work.Donald J. La Rocca, 'Pattern Books by Gilles and Joseph Demarteau for Firearms Decoration in the French Rococo Style', The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2008 Head of an old man, after François Boucher In 1746 at the age of 24, he was admitted as a master engraver-carver on all metals.
Born in the parish of Shenfield in Essex on 1 February 1756, he was the son of Isaac Taylor by his wife, Sarah Hackshaw, daughter of Josiah Jefferys of Shenfield. He was educated at a grammar school at Brentwood in Essex, and on completing his fifteenth year was articled to his father as an engraver, and studied under Francesco Bartolozzi. In 1777 he visited Paris. Taylor went into business in London as an engraver.
Following his service in the military, Lundberg returned to Spokane. Few details are available about his life during the first decade of the twentieth century. It is, however, known that two times during that period he studied in Europe under Herberich, a German government engraver, and also, in Germany, engraved banknotes for the German Government. By 1911 he was an established engraver in Spokane working for the E. J. Hyde Jewelry Company.(1911).
The Metamorphoses of Ovid has been illustrated by several artists through time. In 1563 in Frankfurt, a German bilingual translation by Johann Posthius was published, featuring the woodcuts of renowned German engraver Virgil Solis. The illustration of Myrrha depicts Myrrha's deceiving her father as well as her fleeing from him. In 1717 in London, a Latin-English edition of Metamorphoses was published, translated by Samuel Garth and with plates of French engraver Bernard Picart.
Gilbert Stuart's portrait of Hall with his engraving of Penn's Treaty with the Indians John Hall (21 December 1739 - 1797) was a British engraver and painter. Hall was born in Wivenhoe, near Colchester, in 1739. He studied under the French immigrant engraver Simon François Ravenet. A fellow student was William Wynne Ryland, later executed for forgery. In 1756 and 1761, he won prizes from the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce.
Cornelis Drebbel was born in Alkmaar, Holland in an Anabaptist family in 1572. After some years at the Latin school in Alkmaar, around 1587, he attended the Academy in Haarlem, also located in North-Holland. Teachers at the Academy were Hendrik Goltzius, engraver, painter, alchemist and humanist, Karel van Mander, painter, writer, humanist and Cornelis Corneliszoon of Haarlem. Drebbel became a skilled engraver on copperplate and also took an interest in alchemy.
Saint Jean (1726) Edme Jeaurat (1688–1738) was a French engraver from Vermenton, near Auxerre. Jeaurat was the son of an engraver and the elder brother of painter Etienne Jeaurat. His father took young Edme to Paris and apprenticed him to Bernard Picart. After working there many years, Jeaurat moved to the Netherlands, where he made his living producing engravings of the great paintings in Amsterdam and The Hague, while studying Dutch painting.
John Smart was born at 13 Annandale StreetEdinburgh Post Office Directory 1838 off Leith Walk, the son of Emily Margaret Morton and Robert Campbell Smart (d.1871), an engraver operating from 20 Elm Row. He was educated at Leith High School, and then studied art at the School of Manufacturers, with the intention of becoming an engraver like his father. After showing talent for landscape painting, he instead became a pupil of Horatio McCulloch.
In 1755, Haas was appointed official engraver for the University of Copenhagen. In addition to a large amount of small portraits of contemporary and deceased people (including 15 Zealand bishops) he produced works for The Danish Atlas and vignettes of Frederic Louis Norden's travels. In Hamburg, he had married Anna Rosine Fritsch, the daughter of an acquaintance engraver, and they had four children. Three of his sons, Georg, Meno, and Peter were all engravers.
He was born on March 22, 1816. Kensett attended school at Cheshire Academy, and studied engraving with his immigrant father, Thomas Kensett, and later with his uncle, Alfred Daggett. He worked as engraver in the New Haven area until about 1838, then went to work as a bank note engraver in New York City. In 1840, along with Asher Durand and John William Casilear, Kensett traveled to Europe in order to study painting.
At the Restoration of 1660 Rawlins was reinstated as chief engraver at the mint, Thomas Simon being then styled "Chief Engraver of Arms and Seals". He had a residence in the mint, and in June 1660 was ordered to engrave the king's effigies for the coins. From 30 July to 24 September 1660 he was engaged in engraving a privy seal for Ireland and five judicial seals for the Welsh counties. Rawlins died in 1670.
His father was the French-born engraver, Gian Francesco Ravenet (originally, ), who worked for the Duchy of Parma.Los Pintores de la Expedición de Alejandro Malaspina His grandfather, Simon François Ravenet, was also a well-known engraver. He studied at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Parma, where he stood out as a portraitist. Together with the painter, Fernando Brambila, he joined the scientific mission led by Alejandro Malaspina in Acapulco in 1791.
Deutsch 2015, pp. 55, 58–59, 309. His son Daniel Marot was an engraver, who worked with his father in Paris, until he was motivated by anti-Protestant laws to emigrate to the Netherlands, where he became the primary designer for William of Orange. Another son, Jean Marot II, likely worked as an engraver with his father, and later, after becoming a Catholic, as an architect in the Bâtiments du Roi (1686 to 1702).
Anchia's mother was the daughter of a well-known engraver, Justino Michelena; he was an engraver of handguns and rifles, which led to a job offer from Colt's Manufacturing Company, an American firearms manufacturer. At the age of fifteen years old, she migrated with her family to the United States. She graduated from Miami High School. Julio and Edurne met in Miami, and after a long courtship, the couple married in 1967.
Rudolph Ruzicka was born in Bohemia in 1883. He emigrated to the United States of America at age ten, living first in Chicago where he took drawing lessons at the Hull House School before becoming an apprentice wood engraver. From 1900 to 1902 he attended further classes at the Art Institute of Chicago. In 1903 he moved to New York to work as an engraver at the American Bank Note Company and at Calkins & Holden.
Schwarzer Einser, the first German stamp issued by Bavaria in 1849 Johann Peter Haseney (1812, Mehlis, Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg – 1869, Munich) was a German engraver. Haseney came to Munich in his young years, where he worked as an engraver with the Seitz company. There he made different designs for stamps. He engraved the first German stamp, the One Kreuzer black (Schwarzer Einser) in the Kingdom of Bavaria, issued on November 1, 1849.
Pietro Francesco Alberti (1584-1638) was an Italian painter and engraver for the late-Renaissance and early-Baroque periods. He was born at Sansepolcro into a family of artists, the son of painter Durante Alberti from Sansepolcro. He painted historical subjects in the style of his father, and has left works in Rome and in his birthplace. He was the engraver of a plate called Accademia de' Pittori a large print lengthways.
His subjects included Charles Edward Stuart (Bonny Prince Charlie) and King George III of Great Britain. His was appointed Assistant Engraver at the Mint in 1771. His sons Lewis Pingo (1743–1830) and John Pingo also became noted medallists, Lewis succeeding his father as the Mint's Assistant Engraver in 1776. Another son, Benjamin Pingo (1749–94), was Rouge Dragon Pursuivant (1780–1786) and York Herald (1786–1794) in the College of Arms.
The Entombment of Christ, Galleria Borghese, 1610 Sisto Badalocchio Rosa (28 June 1585 – ) was an Italian painter and engraver of the Bolognese School. Born in Parma, he worked first under Agostino Carracci in Bologna, then Annibale Carracci, in Rome. He worked with Annibale till 1609, then moved back to Parma. His best known work as an engraver was the Raphael's Bible series, which he created together with his fellow student, Giovanni Lanfranco.
He was the third son of painter Carl Joseph Begas. Because of his drawing skills, his father encouraged him to become an engraver and sent him to study at the Prussian Academy of Art with the copper engraver and lithographer Gustav Lüderitz (1803-1884). In 1849, he went to Paris to complete his studies. His encounters with the works of the old masters there led to his decision to become a painter instead.
His second sister, Marie-Jeanne Ozanne (12 February 1736, Brest – 16 February 1786, Paris), married the engraver Le Gouaz, whilst her own works include Vue de Livourne and Temps serein, after Vernet ; the Ferme flamande and the Relais flamands, after Wouwerman. His brother, Pierre Ozanne (3 December 1737, Brest – 10 February 1813, Brest) was an engraver and marine engineer. as engravers to give them a livelihood; his sister Marie-Élisabeth also took up pastels.
Schauplatz der fünf Theile der Welt nach und zu Anton Friedrich Büschings grosser Erdbeschreibung in drey Theilen herausgegeben von . Engraving by Ignaz Albrecht [Johann] Ignaz Albrecht (born 1759) was an Austrian engraver active from ca. 1789. He is listed as an engraver in the various Viennese Kommerzialschematismen until 1814. The "Verlassenschaftsabhandlungen" and the "Totenbeschauprotokolle" in the Wiener Stadt- und Landesarchiv reveal that two of Albrecht's children died in 1791 and a third died in 1796.
The engravings were made by Tuscan abbot and engraver Lorenzo Lorenzi and Violante Vanni who had studied under British engraver Robert Strange. Engraving was an unusual profession for women in Florence during the period. Title page of volume 4 Storia degli Ucelli Manetti also took interest in agriculture and wrote a book on the varieties of wheat. He also wrote on wine and viniculture, Oenologia toscana (1773) under the pen-name of Giovanni Cosimo Villifranchi.
Harriet Ludlow Clarke was the fourth daughter of Edward Clarke, a London solicitor. Around 1837 she started trying to earn a living as a wood engraver, which was then unusual for a woman. Attracting the notice of the engraver William Harvey, she executed a large cut from his design for the Penny Magazine in 1838. With Harvey's support, Clarke earned a good deal of money, which she used to build model labourers' homes at Cheshunt.
1835 woodcut by Harvey portraying the killing of King Edward the Martyr William Harvey (13 July 1796 – 1866) was a British wood-engraver and illustrator. Born at Newcastle upon Tyne, Harvey was the son of a bath-keeper. At the age of 14, he was apprenticed to Thomas Bewick, and became one of his favorite pupils. Bewick describes him as one "who both as an engraver & designer, stands preeminent" at his day (Memoir, p. 200).
Portrait of Jacob van der Tocht Lambertus Antonius Claessens or Lambert Antoine Claessens (21 November 1763 in Antwerp - 6 October 1834 in Rueil- Malmaison) was a Flemish engraver, print artist, copyist and publisher. He trained initially in Antwerp as a landscape painter and then in London as an engraver with Francesco Bartolozzi. He was active in Amsterdam and Paris. He is known for his reproductive prints mainly of portraits and old master paintings.
Duke of Cadaval (1728, attributed) Pastorale (c.1730) Pierre-Antoine Quillard, (c.1700, in Paris – 25 November 1733, Lisbon) was a French portrait painter and engraver who worked in Portugal.
King George's Sound, first published in Matthew Flinders' 1814 A voyage to Terra Australis. After a painting by William Westall. John Byrne (1786–1847) was an English painter and engraver.
Anderson was born in Bristol on 11 May 1884,"Mr. Stanley Anderson." Paul Drury, The Times, 14 March 1966, p. 12. the son of Alfred Ernest Anderson, a silver engraver.
Self-portrait (date unknown) The Sailmakers Pierre Henri Vaillant (30 January 1878, Paris – 8 May 1939, Chartres) was a French painter and engraver. He specialized in genre paintings and portraits.
Richard Gough was of the view that Haynes was more successful at providing drawings for William Henry Toms and others to engrave, than as an engraver in his own right.
Guérin by an unknown artist Christophe Guérin (1758–1831) was a French engraver and painter. He is notable for his engravings and his reproductions of paintings by Raphael and Correggio.
Self-portrait (1649) Cat Sleeping, 1657 Cornelis Visscher (1629 in Haarlem – 1658 in Haarlem), was a Dutch Golden Age engraver and the brother of Jan de Visscher and Lambert Visscher.
Portrait of Hugh Percy, 2nd Duke of Northumberland, ca. 1765 John Finlayson (c. 1730–1776) was an English engraver. Finlayson was born about the year 1730, and worked in London.
Quranic School Women at the Fountain André Suréda (5 June 1872, Versailles - 7 January 1930, Versailles) was a French painter, designer, engraver and illustrator. He was married to the artist, .
Rocco Pozzi sketch ca. 1757 Rocco Pozzi (died c. 1780), was an Italian painter and engraver of the Baroque period, active around 1750. He was the brother of Stefano Pozzi.
Boucher was also a gifted engraver and etcher. Boucher etched some 180 original copperplates. He made many etchings after Watteau. He thus helped propagate a taste for reproductions of drawings.
Frédéric-Charles Victor de Vernon (date unknown) Frédéric-Charles Victor de Vernon (17 November 1858, in Paris – 28 October 1912 in Paris), was a sculptor and engraver of French medals.
As a wood-engraver Dudley was self-taught, but went on to have a career in the art, producing work for various publishers and periodicals until shortly before his death.
Jean-François Brun (editor), Le Patrimoine du timbre-poste français, Flohic éditions, 1998, , page 75. After his death, his brother Jean-Auguste Barre succeeded him as Chief Engraver in 1879.
Prosper Guéranger; print by Gaillard (c.1875) Claude Ferdinand Gaillard (7 January 1834 – 19 January 1887) was a French engraver and painter, who had been born and died in Paris.
Edward Le Davis (fl. 1671–1691) was a Welsh engraver and art dealer. Born Edward Davis, he spent some time working in France, and later prefixed "Le" to his surname.
Gustav Morelli (15 February 1848 – 21 March 1909) was a Hungarian engraver and illustrator who specialized in the woodcut technique. He was born in Pest, Hungary, and died in Budapest.
Photography of artist in the 1910s. João Fahrion (October 4, 1898 - August 11, 1970) was a Brazilian painter, engraver, draughtsman and illustrator. He was born and died in Porto Alegre.
Self-portrait (1824) Leonardo Alenza y Nieto (6 November 1807, Madrid – 30 June 1845, Madrid) was a Spanish painter and engraver in the Romantic style; associated with the Costumbrista movement.
"Benn's Club", with Robert Alsop; William Benn; John Blashford. John Faber Jr. (1684 - 2 May 1756)Johan Faber II at the RKD was a Dutch portrait engraver active in London.
James Johnson (1753? – 26 February 1811) was a Scottish engraver, publisher and music seller known for his connection with the songbook The Scots Musical Museum and the poet Robert Burns.
Pedro Hernández (Salamanca, 1585? - 1665) was a Spanish sculptor, drawer and engraver. He belongs to the Castilian school, being a contemporary artist of Gregorio Fernández. He mainly created religious works.
This portrait of him was published in 1645 by Jeremiah Falck of Danzig (also known as "Jeremias Falck Polonus" or "Jeremias Falck Gedanensis"), a well-known seventeenth century steel engraver.
Georg Wolfgang Knorr Plate XII from "Deliciae Naturae Selectae" (1751–67) Georg Wolfgang Knorr (30 December 1705, in Nürnberg – 17 September 1761, in Nürnberg) was a German engraver and naturalist.
Giovanni Battista Leonetti was an Italian engraver. He worked in Rome at the commencement of the 19th century, and died before 1830. He engraved works by Guercino and Francesco Gessi.
Saint Roch is comforted by an angel, by Francesco Caracci. Francesco Carracci (1595 - 3 June 1622) was an Italian painter and engraver, and nephew of the more famous Agostino Carracci.
The of Munich The Doctor's Visit, or The Imaginary Illness Fritz Schider or Schieder (13 February 1846, Salzburg - 15 March 1907, Basel) was an Austrian painter, engraver and art teacher.
Engraving by Veneziano of Alcibiades Agostino Veneziano ("Venetian Agostino"), whose real name was Agostino de' Musi (c. 1490 – c. 1540), was an important and prolific Italian engraver of the Renaissance.
1836 1860 1875 James Shaw (12 January 1815 – 1 September 1881) was a Scottish painter, photographer, engraver, lithographer, surveyor, and lawyer. He was also an early colonist of South Australia.
Pieter Casteels for Twelve Months of Flowers by Robert Furber (1730). Henry Fletcher (fl. 1710–1750), was an English engraver. Fletcher worked in London, and produced engravings possessing some merit.
Jacob Manz, Jr. (1 October 1837 Marthalen, Switzerland – 25 April 1916 Chicago) was, from 1855 until his death, a Chicago-based engraver and founding partner of J. Manz Engraving Company.
From 1800 he carried on business in London, and on 30 September 1816 was appointed Chief Engraver of the Seals. He died on 18 October 1830 in Nassau Street, London.
He died in San Luis Obispo, California, on January 2, 1907. In 1929, Author Ralph Clifton Smith published a collection of Kruell works called "Gustav Kruell, American portrait engraver on wood".
Jesus appears to the disciples William Brassey Hole RSA (7 November 1846 - 22 October 1917) was an English artist, illustrator, etcher and engraver, known for his industrial, historical and biblical scenes.
Pierre Gandon was a French illustrator and engraver of postage stamps. He was born on 20 January 1899 in L'Haÿ-les-Roses (Val-de-Marne) and died on 23 July 1990.
Self-portrait engraving (date unknown) Adriano Sousa Lopes (20 February 1879, Leiria - 21 April 1944, Lisbon) was a Portuguese Modernist painter and engraver who worked in a wide range of genres.
Self-portrait (1883) Jules Jacques Veyrassat (12 April 1828, Paris – 2 July 1893, Paris) was a French painter and engraver; associated with the Barbizon school. Most of his works feature animals.
Willem de Vos, after Anthony van Dyck, engraved between 1632 and 1641. Schelte a Bolswert (1586–1659) was a leading Dutch engraver, noted for his works after Rubens and Van Dyck.
Willem Hondius or Willem Hondt (ca. 1598 in The Hague - 1652 or 1658 in Danzig (Gdańsk)) was a Dutch engraver, cartographer and painter who spent most of his life in Poland.
Thomas Oldham Barlow (4 August 1824 - 24 December 1889) was an English mezzotint engraver. His prints helped to popularise the works of painters like John Phillip and Sir John Everett Millais.
"Tobias Mayers Mondkarte", from the Schrötersche Mondwerk Georg Heinrich Tischbein (1753/55, Marburg - 4 March 1848, Bremen) was a German engraver, etcher, cartographer and engineer from the Tischbein family of artists.
Portrait of Jacob Matham in Het Gulden Cabinet, engraving by Antony van der Does Jacob Matham (15 October 1571 – 20 January 1631), of Haarlem, was a famous engraver and pen-draftsman.
Andy English (born 1956) is an English wood-engraver and educator who pioneered the use of the Internet to teach a wider audience about wood- engraving and how to do it.
Apostle and evangelist John with fishing rod and eagle engraved by Johan Barra, after Joos van Winghe Johan Bara or Johannes Barra (1581–1634) was a Dutch painter, designer and engraver.
William James Linton. William James Linton (December 7, 1812December 29, 1897) was an English-born American wood-engraver, landscape painter, political reformer and author of memoirs, novels, poetry and non-fiction.
Family Search. Retrieved 11 July 2019. Leonard D Fryer England and Wales Census, 1901. Family Search. Retrieved 11 July 2019. Augustus Fryer worked for Waterlow and Sons as a stamp engraver.
Portrait of Vicente Espinel Luis Fernández Noseret (fl. 1793-1829, Madrid) was a Spanish engraver who studied with Manuel Salvador Carmona at the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando.
Johannes "Jan" Kip (1652/53, Amsterdam – 1722, Westminster) was a Dutch draftsman, engraver and print dealer. Together with Leonard Knyff, he made a speciality of engraved views of English country houses.
Mary, whose maiden name was Mitchell, married Joseph Collyer the elder; their son, Joseph Collyer the younger, was an engraver, and illustrated one edition of his mother's translation Death of Abel.
Among Toms's apprentices was the engraver and publisher John Boydell. W. H. Toms lived in Masham Street, London, and was the father of the painter Peter Toms. Toms died in 1765.
Jan Gerritsz van Bronckhorst (also Bronchorst or Bronkhorst; 1603–1661) was a Dutch Golden Age painter and engraver. He is considered today to be a minor member of the Utrecht Caravaggisti.
Altneu Synagogue in Prague (1838) Wilhelm Kandler or, in Czech, Vilém Kandler (28 February 1816, Chrastava - 18 May 1896 in Prague), was a Bohemian German painter, illustrator, engraver and amateur essayist.
George Noble (fl. 1795–1806) was an English line-engraver. The son of Edward Noble, author of Elements of Linear Perspective, he was brother to Samuel Noble and William Bonneau Noble.
Self-portrait, 1872. Gilbert's Shylock After the Trial, an illustration to The Merchant of Venice. Sir John Gilbert (21 July 1817 – 5 October 1897) was an English artist, illustrator and engraver.
Gaylord Schanilec (born 15 April 1955) is an American wood engraver, printer, designer, poet, and illustrator.Schanilec, Gaylord (2008). Sylvae: An Adventure in Fine Printmaking. Parenthesis 15 (Autumn 2008), pp. 26–30.
'Acragas (Gr. ') was an engraver, or silversmith, spoken of by Pliny the Elder.Pliny the Elder, Naturalis Historia xxxiii. 12. § 55 It is not known either when or where he was born.
There, he worked as a tutor to the children of a high-ranking VOC official. In 1770, he returned to Amsterdam and became an apprentice to painter and engraver Reinier Vinkeles.
Flori Van Acker or Florimond Marie Van Acker (6 April 1858 – 14 March 1940) was a neo-romantic, impressionist Belgian painter, engraver, stamp designer and director of the Academy of Bruges.
Portrait of Giorgione, engraved by Cristoforo Corionano after Giorgio Vasari, Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects, 1568 Cristoforo Coriolano () (born 1540) was a German engraver of the Renaissance.
Walter Montieth Aikman (1857–1939) was an engraver, etcher, bookplate designer, and visual artist. He was born in New York City, USA, and was buried in Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn.
David Martin (1 April 1737 – 30 December 1797) was a Scottish painter and engraver. Born in Fife, he studied in Italy and England, before gaining a reputation as a portrait painter.
By manipulating the plate with his left hand in harmony with the motions of the burin, the engraver can facilitate the direction of the lines, as well as steadying the plate.
Norbert Roettiers (1665 – 18 May 1727) was a celebrated Flanders-born engraver of currency and medals in both England and France. With his elder brother James he was named Engraver-General to the British Royal Mint in 1695. Roettiers was born in Antwerp, the third son of John Roettiers (1631–1703), and a member of an illustrious family of engravers, goldsmiths, and silversmiths, including his brother James Roettiers (1663–1698); cousin Joseph-Charles Roettiers (1691–1779); son Jacques Roettiers (1707–1784), also known as James; and grandson Jacques-Nicolas Roettiers (1736–1788). He was employed in the British Royal Mint from about 1684 onwards, and in 1690 was officially the given post (together with his brother James) of assistant engraver.
Troilus and Cressida, Act V, Scene II. Painted by Angelica Kauffman in 1789, and engraved by Luigi Schiavonetti for the Boydell Shakespeare Gallery's illustrated edition of Shakespeare in 1795. Luigi Schiavonetti (1 April 1765 - 7 June 1810), Italian reproductive engraver and etcher, was born at Bassano in Venetia. After having studied art for several years he was employed by Testolini, an engraver of very indifferent abilities, to execute imitations of Bartolozzi's works, which he passed off as his own. In 1790, Testolini was invited by Bartolozzi to join him in England, and, it having been discovered that Schiavonetti, who accompanied him, had executed the plates in question, he was employed by Bartolozzi and became an eminent engraver in both the line and the stipple manner.
Lebas was engraver to the Cabinet du roi and successfully produced engravings after several paintings by different artists. His oeuvre amounts to more than 500 works, including many large portraits after Vernet, and several works after van de Velde, Parrocel, Berchem, Ruysdaël, Watteau, Oudry and Lancret. He trained the line engraver François- Anne David. He served time in the army from 1739 to 1741, but was ultimately thrown out, because of philosical disagreements with his commanding officer.
After Mint Chief Engraver William Kneass suffered a stroke later that year, Christian Gobrecht was hired as an engraver. On August 1, Patterson wrote a letter to Philadelphia artist Thomas Sully laying out his plans for the dollar coin. He also asked Titian Peale to create a design for the coin. Sully created an obverse design depicting a seated representation of Liberty and Peale a reverse depicting a soaring bald eagle, which were converted into coin designs by Gobrecht.
He chose to pursue the art of engraving, and entered the atelier of a copperplate engraver in Paris. He made a number of inventions related to this field, the first being a purely mechanical process for engraving in aquatint (gravure au lavis) and in colour. After making many prints using the technique, he sold the secret. An engraver and patron of art, the Comte de Caylus, was one of the first to use the new machine.
Medallion depicting Daniel François de Gélas de Lautrec by Jean Dassier, 1738 Jean Dassier (August or October 17, 1676 – November 12, 1763) was a Genevan engraver and medallist. Dassier was born in Geneva, and his father was the official Mint Engraver for the Republic of Geneva. In 1703 Dassier married Anne Prevost-Gaudy, and they had two sons. He studied in Paris with Jean Mauger and Joseph Roettiers, and he became an assistant to his father.
His daughter Susanne Maria von Sandrart was also an artist and engraver. Sandrart was a very prolific artist; over 400 engravings from his hand are extant. He was best known as a portraitist of prominent contemporary citizens of Nuremberg, as an engraver of maps, and as an illustrator of the literary works of Nuremberg writers, especially Sigmund von Birken. Today Sandrart is best remembered as the founder and first director of the Nuremberg Academy of Fine Arts (est. 1662).
Both his father Adolf (1813–1868) an engraver and lithographer, and his grandfather Johan (178012 March 1863) an engraver, were well known artists. Schönberg attended the Imperial and Royal Unified Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna from 1858 to 1860, where his father had also studied. He travelled to Munich to work under Hermann Anschütz at the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich. However, he had to abandon his studies to Vienna to assist his impoverished father.
In the United States, wood-engraved publications also began to take hold, such as Harper's Weekly. Frank Leslie, a British-born engraver who had headed the engraving department of the Illustrated London News, immigrated to the United States in 1848, where he developed a means to divide the labor for making wood engravings. A single design was divided into a grid, and each engraver worked on a square. The blocks were then assembled into a single image.
Hendrick Goltzius, or Hendrik, (; ; January or February 1558 – 1 January 1617) was a German-born Dutch printmaker, draftsman, and painter. He was the leading Dutch engraver of the early Baroque period, or Northern Mannerism, lauded for his sophisticated technique, technical mastership and "exuberance" of his compositions. According to A. Hyatt Mayor, Goltzius "was the last professional engraver who drew with the authority of a good painter and the last who invented many pictures for others to copy".Mayor, no.
Portrait of a boy by Thomas Holloway, probably his nephew, in pastels. Thomas Holloway (1748 Broad Street, London - 28 February 1827 Coltishall) was an English portrait painter and engraver. Holloway was apprenticed to a seal engraver named Stent at a young age. He went on to study engraving at the Royal Academy beginning in 1773, during which time he resided at 11 Beaches Row, near Charles Square, Hoxton, and exhibited pastel portraits at the Society of Artists in 1777.
Jigsaw puzzles are perhaps the most popular form of puzzle. Jigsaw puzzles were invented around 1760, when John Spilsbury, a British engraver and cartographer, mounted a map on a sheet of wood, which he then sawed around the outline of each individual country on the map. He then used the resulting pieces as an aid for the teaching of geography. John Spilsbury, an engraver and mapmaker, was also credited with inventing the first jigsaw puzzle in 1767.
Celina Runeborg (February 17, 1878–1977), was a Swedish painter and map engraver from Stockholm. Runeborg was the daughter of the merchant Abraham Rubenson and Frida Kaiser and from 1907 married the brewmaster Ivar Runeborg and mother of Greta Runeborg-Tell. Runeborg studied with Adolf Lindberg and C.W. Jaensson at the Technical School in Stockholm and during study trips to Germany. When she was employed by the Swedish Maritime Administration, she was Sweden's only female chart engraver.
Louis d'or of Louis XV Charles Norbert Roettiers (August 15, 1720 – November 19, 1772) was a noted French engraver and medallist. Roettiers was born in Paris to Joseph-Charles Roettiers (April 13, 1691 – March 14, 1779), into the celebrated Roettier family of medallists, silversmiths, and goldsmiths. He served as engraver-general of the French mint (1753–1768), and graveur particulier de l'atelier monétaire de Paris until his death (1759–1772). He became a member of the Académie in 1764.
He was a designer and engraver and from 1786 he worked for three years as a designer and engraver at a cotton factory in Ukraine. There he collected butterflies and moths including descriptions and illustrations of some in Beiträge zur Geschichte der Schmetterlinge (1786–1790) along with other new species from the countryside around his home in Augsburg. Hübner's masterwork "Tentamen" was intended as a discussion document. Inadvertently published, it led to subsequent confusion in classification.
Their sons included Pierre-Louis-Isaac (baptized 23 May 1727), Pierre-Simon-Benjamin (baptized 5 November 1730) and Thomas-Germain-Joseph (baptized 31 August 1735). Duvivier's son Benjamin was also a graveur du roi (King's Engraver) and member of the Academy. Pierre- Simon-Benjamin Duvivier (1728-1819) may have had more talent than his father. His daughter Jeanne-Louise-Françoise Duvivier married the engraver Jacques- Nicolas Tardieu and is on record as having made several engravings herself.
Portrait of Jacob Binck engraved after self-portrait by Simon Frisius Jakob Binck (or Bink) (1485 - 1568/9) was a German engraver, etcher, painter, medalist, copyist and art dealer. He was a peripatetic artist who worked for various courts in Northern Europe, especially the Danish court, and also resided in Antwerp for a while.Jacob Binck at the Netherlands Institute for Art History As an engraver he is counted as a peripheral member of the Little Masters group.
Sometime during this period a watercolor copy of The Heart of the Andes was made. It is not certain who painted the copy, but Church very likely is not the artist; the engraver Richard Woodman or one of his sons has been proposed. The watercolor is now presumed to have originated in Britain and been made for the use of the engraver, William Forrest of Edinburgh. The watercolor is now in the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
Barber was also a prolific pattern designer, and for a time engaged in a "pattern war" with fellow coin designer and future Chief Engraver George T. Morgan. There were numerous pattern designs for "Standard" coinage soon after he became the chief engraver. The only part of this idea that became reality was a standardized "Commercial" dollar which eventually became the Trade dollar. The high watermark of his pattern work was the beautiful so-called "Amazonian" pattern coinage of 1872.
Rijksmuseum Crispijn (van) de Passe (born 1594/1595 in Cologne — buried 19 January 1670 in Amsterdam), also known as Crispijn (van) de Passe the Younger (Dutch: Crispijn (van) de Passe de Jonge) or Crispijn (van) de Passe (II), was a Dutch Golden Age engraver, draughtsman and publisher of prints. "Crispijn de Passe (II)", RKD He was a member of the large printmaking Van de Passe family, son of the engraver and print publisher Crispijn van de Passe the Elder.
He was born in Edinburgh and educated at George Heriot's School.Dictionary of National Biography: William Howison He was originally apprenticed to an engraver named Wilson and later worked under William Home Lizars. David Octavius Hill introduced him to Sir George Harvey, after which point he reproduced many of Harvey's paintings in engraved form. He gained particular notoriety for his engraving The Curlers which led to his acceptance into the Royal Scottish Academy, the only engraver admitted.
68) Vertue listed the painter and engraver Gerhard Bockman as a member in 1724.Grindle, Nicholas, 'Bockman, Gerhard (1686–1773), portrait painter and engraver' in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography The club was well connected with the older-established Virtuosi of St Luke (c. 1689–1743), with which it is sometimes confused, although it was less prestigious. The Rose and Crown Club remained in existence until 1745 and held its last meeting at the Half-Moon Tavern.
Gilbert Munger, photograph taken c. 1870 Gilbert Davis Munger was born on April 14, 1837, in Madison, Connecticut, to Sherman and Lucretia (Benton) Munger, the last of five children. He was a distant cousin of the American engraver and artist George Munger. When he evinced artistic talent at an early age, his family sent him to Washington, D.C., at the age of just 13 to apprentice with William H. Dougal, who was then senior engraver at the Smithsonian Institution.
Helen Hyde (April 6, 1868 – May 13, 1919) was an American etcher and engraver. She is best known for her color etching process and woodblock prints reflecting Japanese women and children characterizations.
Charlotte and Elizabeth trained as artists, and worked on borders, monograms, head and tail pieces, and other embellishments. The engraver of most of the ornamental wood-blocks was Mary Byfield (died 1871).
Admiral Watson, 13 February 1756 by Pierre-Charles Canot, British Museum, between 1756-1777 Pierre-Charles Canot (c.1710–77) was a French engraver who spent most of his career in England.
Tony Johannot. Illustration (c. 1840) for La Nouvelle Héloïse (1761) by Rousseau Antoine Johannot, known commonly as Tony Johannot (9 November 1803 – 4 August 1852), was a French engraver, illustrator and painter.
James Jefferys (19 May 1751 – 31 January 1784) was a British engraver and painter. His work was reassessed in the 1970s following the discovery of a lost set of drawings in Maidstone.
"Banco de la Paciencia", Sala Terracota 4, Museo de la Ceramica de Cuba, 2011. Jose Ramon Gonzalez Delgado (born in Holguin, Cuba 1953) is a contemporary Cuban artist, painter, engraver and ceramist.
Whilst being principally remembered as an engraver, Walker was also an able sculptor, his notable work being the figure of Queen Elizabeth I on the Scott Monument on Princes Street in Edinburgh.
Satan tempting Booth to the murder of the President by Magee, c. 1865 John L. Magee (c. 1820-1870s?) was an American artist, lithographer, and engraver. Magee was born in New York.
Werner Wittig (25 October 1930 in Chemnitz – 31 December 2013) was a German painter, engraver and printmaker. He won the Hans Theo Richter-Preis of the Sächsische Akademie der Künste in 2000.
Euston Station by Radclyffe, 1838 Edward Radclyffe (1809–1863) was a British engraver, known from his illustrations of Thomas Roscoe's The London & Birmingham railway from 1839 in cooperation with George Dodgson Callow.
Simó Gómez. From L'Esquella de la Torratxa (1880) The Repentance of Judas (1874) Simó Gómez Polo (11 November 1845 - 11 June 1880) was a Catalan painter and engraver in the Realistic style.
Le Sueur's Solomon before the ark of the covenant, painted in 1747. Blaise Nicholas Le Sueur, 1716-1783, German painter and engraver of allegorical and historical subjects.Blaise LeSeuer. Accessed 6 May 2010.
Italian Cavalry in East Africa, 1885–86 Quinto Cenni (20 March 1845 – 13 August 1917) was an Italian painter, engraver, lithographer and illustrator who specialized in depicting military personnel and their uniforms.
Leonard Fryer was born in Plaistow, West Ham, Essex, in 1891 to Augustus Frederick Fryer, a steel engraver, and his wife Emma.Leonard Douglas Fryer England and Wales Birth Registration Index, 1837–2008.
Lothar von Seebach (1880) Baron Lothar von Seebach (or Lothaire de Seebach; 26 March 1853, Fessenbach, now part of Offenburg - 23 September 1930, Strasbourg) was an Alsatian painter, designer, watercolorist and engraver.
William Callow (1812–1908) was an English landscape painter, engraver and water colourist.National Portrait Gallery, Later Victorian Portraits Catalogue, William Callow, accessed 18 September 2014.Addison, Oakes, Lawson and Sladen, p.274.
The only evidence for this is the work of the engraver Gerd Könitzer who, in the middle of the 19th century, made several prints of the Waldstein summit and its various structures.
Anton Prinner (1902 – 1983) was a Hungarian, naturalized French painter, engraver and sculptor. Born Anna Prinner in Budapest, Prinner began using the first name Anton when he moved to France in 1928.
Chapel Adjoining Wakefield Bridge, coloured engraving, William Henry Toms, 1743. Bethlehem Hospital by Toms for William Maitland's History of London, published 1739. William Henry Toms (c. 1700-1765) was an English engraver.
Emilio Greco (11 October 1913 in Catania, Sicily - 5 April 1995) was an Italian sculptor, engraver, medallist Emilio Greco 1913–1995 Tate, 2013. Retrieved 26 September 2013. Archived here. , writer and poet.
Pierre Petit (c.1900) Landscape in Southern France Julien Gustave Gaillardin, known as Julien Gustave Gagliardini (1 March 1846, Mulhouse - 28 November 1927, Paris) was a French Impressionist landscape painter and engraver.
Samuel Rawle (1771–1860) was an English topographical engraver and draughtsman. Rye House, Hertfordshire, 1805. He practised in London. From 1798, he engraved many plates for the European Magazine and Gentleman's Magazine.
He flourished about the middle of the 3rd century BC. There was an engraver of the same name; but when he lived is not known.Karl Otfried Müller, Arch. der Kunst, p. 151.
Giovanni Battista Canossa (died 1747) was an Italian wood engraver. He was born and died in Bologna, where he trained with Giovanni Maria Viani. He spent his whole career in the city.
Gabriel Lettu (1775, Paris - c.1859) was a French painter, engraver and printer, mostly active in Auch between 1830 and 1840. The Musée des Jacobins houses at least four paintings by him.
Ercole Setti (c.1530–1618) was an Italian engraver of the late-Renaissance period. Setti was born in Modena. His pen and ink drawings show a fine draughtsmanship without requiring cross-hatching.

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