: f , ae S dnglish Obie. -pcnts of the (Sth Gentury Old dnglish Sporting Bente M6, Sbnoedlex S Gompany 14 Saot Fifty-Peventh Sireet ew York 1925 Catalogue of An Exhibition of French S Snglish Golowe-prints of the 1Sth Gentury Od dnglish Oporting Lrints December 14th, 1925 to January gth, 1926 Nb. Sbnoedler S Gompany 14 Gast Fifty-Seventh Street WGew York CATALOGUE FRENCH COLOUR-PRINTS OF THE XVII CENTURY 3 HOSE Who have been endowed by nature with a taste for the higher forms of art will find in the collection of eighteenth-century French prints a new field replete with unexpected interest and pleasure, the study of the estampe galante bringing its votaries into close touch with life as it was lived under the Ancien régime, when artistic and grace- ful refinement was a conspicuous feature of the age. Never in the world’s history were the mere accessories of existence embellished with such exquisite decoration as then; never, perhaps, was the human eye better trained with intricacies of felicitous restraint and unerring balance. The level of refined elegance attained by the noblesse —around whom hovered a crowd of artists, sculptors, engravers, and architects, too often, alas! clamorous for payment—permeated the very heart of the country, and the upper class of France prided itself on setting the standard of taste for the world. A characteristic of the French eighteenth-century engravers was their love of pleasure, into the pursuit of which the majority entered with just as great zest as did that fashionable world, the life of which is reflected in the prints of their day. Artists, publishers, and engravers feasted and supped together, whilst most of them flung away the sums earned by the exercise of their talents, without the slightest hesitation or restraint. For them the spirit of economy did not exist; children as regards money, a full purse served but to gratify the caprice of the moment. Ever ready to give or to lend, and careless of the morrow, they trusted in a future which brought to the majority but poverty and woe. “The beautiful estampe galante, it may confidently be affirmed, will maintain its position. Exhaling the very spirit of the ancien régime, its charms must ever appeal to all lovers of daintiness and grace; whilst at the same time, owing to its accurate delineation of architecture and costume, it is certain to retain an undying interest for the student of the vanished age.”’ Raps Neviti: French Prints of the Eighteenth Century. PIERRE-MICHEL ALIX ‘Ir was in coloured portraiture that Pierre-Michel Alix found his métier as an engraver, and some of his portrait-prints are among the best of the period. Aquatint was his medium, and he used it, amu repérage, with very happy skill and a nice pictorial sense. Ea Matcoum C. SALAMAN 1 DaLEMBERT Jean Baptiste le Rond d'Alembert was an editor of the Encyclo- pédie for which he wrote the introduction, the mathematical ar- ticles, and part of the biographies. In 1772 he became perpetual secretary of the Académie Francaise, and in that capacity was spokesman of the parti des philosophes of which Voltaire was the head. : 2 GuILLAuME THomMaAs RayNAL After the painting by Garnerey. Collection: Frederic R. Halsey. Guillaume Thomas Francois Raynal, called Abbé Raynal, was a French historian and philosopher. He was a priest attached to the parish of St. Sulpice in Paris, but was dismissed for bad con- duct, and subsequently devoted himself to literature. His best known work is the ‘Philosophical and Political History of the Establishments and Commerce of the Europeans in the Two Indies’’: published in 1770. The book was burned by order of the Parliament in 1781 on account of its liberalism, and its author was exiled. The same year he published ‘“Tableau et revolutions des colonies Anglaise dans 1’Amerique Septrionale,’’ of which there is a very poor English translation. His sentence was re- versed in 1788, and Raynal returned to France. He was regarded as a leader of the French freethinkers. 3 VOLTAIRE After the painting by Garnerey. ‘Here is Voltaire, as pictured by Garnerey, smiling, of course, as it was his habit to smile, at everything—a smile that lives un- forgettably, immortally, in the extraordinary legend and influ- ence of his life, as it does in Houdin’s wonderful statue in the foyer of the Théatre Francaise. Yet you remember how Voltaire’s smile would have eluded Houdin altogether had not a chance visitor to the sculptor’s studio recalled it by happily reminding the aged immortal how the actors of Paris had crowned him with laurels in the Maison Moliére. In Alix’s print it also lives.”’ Matcoitm C. SALAMAN 4 La LantTErRNE Macique p’AMouR After the painting by Challe. Proof before all letters. [6 ] LOUIS MARIN BONNET “AxtTHouGH his claim to the invention of the crayon manner cannot be sustained, he certainly extended its value by using it on a series of plates for printing in colours in imitation of pastel drawings. The pastel manner was indubitably Bonnet’s own, and, perhaps, it was his most valuable contribution to the history and practice of engraving... . He had undoubtedly a flair for the popular novelty, and when English fashions were the vogue in Paris, Bonnet added an artificial attraction to these prints by giving them English titles... . . As they were first issued in 1774, and Ryland’s earliest colour-prints were dated 1775, there can be little doubt that Bonnet influenced the first adventures in coloured stipple in England.”’ Matcotm C. SALAMAN 5 THE CHARMEs OF THE MorNnING Engraved by Bonnet from his own design. 6 La LarrTiERE Engraved by Bonnet from his own design. The borders of both of the above-named prints are printed in gold: ““L’ Invention de cette nouvelle maniére de Graver et d’imprimer L or a été trouvée par Louis Marin et Mise au jour le 16 Novembre, 1774." ““His process was in essentials the same as that introduced by Frangois and perfected by Demarteau, but the peculiarity which distinguishes his work from theirs is the use of a number of plates, giving a correspond- ing number of colours, and enabling him to reproduce the effect of draw- ings in coloured chalks or pastel. Such prints were often printed on blue paper. He used also the rather rare expedient of printing with a white pigment to render the higher lights than the colour of the paper itself would give. . . . Bonnet invented a process of printing gold, and pro- duced a series of prints in which not only the coloured pastel drawing, but the gold frame in which it was placed, was reproduced in fac-simile. For some reason or other this set of prints was signed “Louis Marin,’ the surname of Bonnet being omitted. They have higher prices attached to them than any other numbers in Bonnet’s original list. . . . They are rather rare and the Cabinet des Estampes at Paris does not seem to possess them; none were included in the 1906exhibition of colour- prints at the Bibliothéque Nationale.”’ zee CAMPBELL DRAGSON JACQUES COUCHE AND JEAN DAMBRUN 7 La Coquette FIxéE After Fragonard. Etched by Couché, finished in line engraving, by Dambrun. PHILIBERT LOUIS DEBUCOURT “THERE remains only one more engraver to discuss, but he is by uni- versal consent one of the greatest of all this group, Philibert Louis Debu- court (born 1755, died 1831). In his best period, from 1785 to 1800, he was a true painter-engraver, the only one of the engravers in colour of his period who worked entirely from his own designs, pictures, gouaches or drawings in water-colours.”’ CampseLL DopGson “WE come now to the most distinguished personality among the French colour-engravers of theeighteenth century. Philibert Louis Debu- court, unlike the others, was a creative artist; he had imagination, in- vention, he had the seeing eye, with an alert brain behind it, and a deft and sympathetic hand quick in its service. . . . Adopting the fully- developed technique of Janinet, he used it in a brilliant and vivacious manner distinctly his own, modifying and supplementing it at need, using aquatint and even mezzotint for his tones, with always a good deal of etching for crispness and delicacy of accent.”’ Matcoumm C. SALAMAN 8 Le MENUET DE LA MARIE Painted and engraved in 1786. Collection: Frederic R. Halsey “In the same year came Le Menuet de la Mariée, published originally as a pendant to Descourtis’s La Noce au Village, after Taunay. But how much greater charm of pictorial expression, how much more vitality, how much more sense of character, individual as well as collective, there is in this fascinating print of Debu- court's than in the Taunay—Descourtis print, notwithstanding its grace of composition and its charming quality of colour- engraving. Everybody in Le Menuet de la Mariée is actually doing something, actually living in the picture, not posing in it. And this is Debucourt’s great quality, this power of investing the persons of his designs with life and actuality. This stout old bailiff is certainly dancing with the coquettish bride, there is no [8 ] pretence about it, and very careful he is to do his steps as they ought to be done, without shirking. There is no doubt that the old grandfather is giving the young bridegroom the benefit of some ancient nuptial jest. But the whole scene is instinct with a happy spontaneity, a jolly vivacity. The colour is delightful in its harmonious balance of tones, printed from one black plate and one each with blue, yellow, red and rose.”’ Matcoum C. SALAMAN 9 Heur et Marueur, ov La CrucueE Cassie Proof before letters. In scratched script at left: P. 1. Du Bucourt, 1787. 10 L’EscaLapgE, ou Les ADIEUXx DU MaTIN Proof before letters. In scratched script at left: Pesnt et Grave par P.I. Du Bucourt Peintre du Roy. A pair. “In Heur et Malheur, ou la Cruche Cassée, and its companion print, L’ Escalade, ou les Adieux du Matin, both dated 1787, we turn from the passing actualities of fashion to the eternal verities of human nature, romance, love’s young dream. Is there any need to de- scribe Heur et Malheur, ou la Cruche Cassée? Suffice it to say, the youth is professing himself very tenderly sorry over the broken pitcher, and presently, when he has induced his sweetheart to dry her tears, he will fetch the little shoe she has left behind her on the hay-heap. In L’ Escalade ou les Adieux du Matin, we see that love has been no laggard with these young people. Happy, happy time, when the white star hovers Low above dim fields fresh with blooming dew, Near the face of dawn, that draws athwart the darkness. Happy, are these two lovers? or do we hear the sca, passionate ‘longing beyond happiness ? Love me though dusk begin and dark retire; Ah God, ah God, that day should be so soon. Well, Debucourt’s print is quite a little lyric; let it sing its mean- ing to you as you will.” Eom Matcotm C. SALAMAN CHARLES-MELCHIOR DESCOURTIS ‘We come now to the engraver of a quartette of prints that hold their own, in the estimation of collectors, with the most desirable works of Debucourt and Janinet, and, for the sake of their colour engraving, they doubtless deserve this honour, if not entirely for the merit of their de- signs. Charles Melchior Descourtis was a pupil of Janinet, and he was in every way worthy of his master. He put all his technical skill and his charming sense of colour into the translation of Nicolas Antoine Taunay’s designs.”’ Matcou C, SALaMAN 11 La Noce pe VILLAGE After Nicolas Antoine Taunay. ‘In Charles-Melchior Descourtis (born 1753, died 1820) we have one of the most considerable masters of aquatint engraving in colours. We reproduce all four of his most celebrated works, after Nicolas Antoine Taunay, of which La Rixe and Le Tam- bourin appear to be rarer than the two others, though La Noce de Village is generally reckoned the masterpiece.”’ CAMPBELL DopGson FRANCOIS JANINET “Aways eager to grasp the new idea and turn it to account, JANINET was typical of his day. French society was avid of any new sensation that could offer the slightest pleasure or amusement. Novelty was the necessity of the fashionable hour, and an easy intimate charm was the desideratum of the social environment, with everywhere the allure of colour for the enhancement of that charm. In the boudoir, in the salon, exquisite Aubusson and Gobelins tapestries, wonderful in colour and gtacious in design, would add loveliness to the comfort of the canapé, the fauteuil and the bergere, while the new fashionable craze for Sévres porcelain stimulated still further the taste for colour. No wonder then, that, with the Frenchman’s love of the graphic arts to encourage the development of the new methods, the idea of colour-printing was in the air. Under Boucher’s inspiration, Louis Marin Bonnet and Gigs DermarTEAU, with pastel and crayon manners, materialized this idea on their copper-plates. Janrnet was not far behind; but with the aquatint method, at least, he was, one may believe, the first.” Matcoim C. SALAMAN tes *““FRANCOISJ ANINET 1s best known by his delicate renderings of the work of Lavreince, the Swedish artist in gouache, who produced so many boudoir-subjects for the pleasure-loving society of Paris, a few years before it was engulfed in the vortex of the Revolution. Two of the best of these are La Comparaison and L’ Aveu Difficile—veritable triumphs of the colour-engraver’s art. Another masterpiece is L’ Indiscrétion. These three exquisite colour-prints convey much of the impression produced by the paintings after which they are engraved.”’ Rawupx Nevitu 12 L’Avevu DirriciLeE Bocher No.8 Beraldi No. 39 After Nicolas Lavreince “L’ Aveu difficile (1787) which serves as a pendant to this lovely engraving (LaComparaison)is, likewise, most delightful.One of the two friends, who lately displayed her charms so complacently, has doubtless wished to test their power: her loosened corsage, the full-blown rose which, symbollically, is about to shed its petals, all seem to indicate it: the experiment has turned out badly and her wiser friend seems to say by way of consolation ‘What do you wish ? It happens to everybody’ or, later, ‘There’s no help for it’. Henri BERALDI 13 La Comparaison Bocher No. 12 Beraldi No. 4o After Nicolas Lavreince. A. Second State with F. Janinet 1787 in scratched letters. B. Third State with the title below and names of painter and engraver. ‘‘La Comparaison, dated 1786, is one of the most captivating prints of the XVIII Century. Lavreince has here found one of his hap- piest inspirations, and Janinet has interpreted this intimate scene in the most sympathetic and happy manner. An engraving in colour, thus treated, gives the illusion of the drawing itself.”’ Henri BERALDI Lised 14 L’INDIscRETION Bocher No.30 Beraldi No. 41 After Nicolas Lavreince. ; A. First State—before the left foot of the seated girl appears and before the curls were carried further down on her right cheek. Of the utmost rarety. B. Second State—with the above changes. “This piece, which serves as a pendant to L’ Aveu Difficile repre- sents a charming and piquant scene. It is executed in an elegant and fine manner, and cannot but add to the reputation which Mr. Janinet has so rightfully acquired by his talents and by his discoveries in engraving and printing in colours.’’ Mercure de France. August 16, 1788 “In L’Indiscrétion, of the same format as L’ Aveu difficile and La Comparaison, the creamy-white complexions of the two friends, their heads so daintily modeled, are treated with the freshness of a water-colour painting.”’ HEnrI BERALDI 15 L’ArmaBLE PaysANE Beraldi No. 50 After Saint-Quentin. 16 La Noce DE VILLAGE Beraldi No. 53 Lz Repas pEs MoIssONNEURS Beraldi No. 54 After Wille fils. A pair. JEAN-BAPTISTE LE PRINCE ‘““Wuo actually invented and developed the process of aquatint might admit a wide solution. Le Prince, however, is generally credited with the invention or, at least, the first practical application of the principle to definite pictorial purpose. It was certainly his aquatints that gave Frangois Janinet, a few years after their first appearance in 1768, theidea of using the process for colour, and so, as he claimed, practically initiat- [ 12 ] ing that style in colour-engraving which captured the taste and fancy of that gay, light-o’-loveday... . “A picturesque personality, Le Prince was a man of many adventures, wanderings and vicissitudes, and, though ‘he warmed both hands be- fore the fire of life,’ he seems never to have burnt them, but to have kept them ever ready to help him out of difficulties. With his violin he tamed wild pirates to good fellowship; with brush and pencil, and the art he had learned from Boucher, he drew fortune with him across Europe; with his pleasant extravagances he created that necessity which was the mother of his invention, Ja gravure au lavis, or, as we call it, aquatint.”’ Matcoitm C. SALAMAN 17 Les Gurs CassiEs Dated 1769. ANTOINE-FRANCOIS SERGENT Born at Chartres in 1751, studied under St. Aubin. When the French Revolution broke out he became president of the Ward of St. Jacques, and secretary to the Jacobin Club. He performed many kindly deeds and was the means of saving many people from the guillotine. In 1794 he married Emira Marceau, sister of General Marceau, and the divorced wife of Champion de Sernet. For two years he was an exile in Switzerland, but on his return to Paris was active in artistic matters. He died, blind, at Nice, in 1817. 18 Martie-THERESE CHARLOTTE, DucHEssE D’ ANGOULEME Daughter of Louis XVI and wife of Louis Antoine de Bourbon Born 1778. Died 1831. Proof before letters. With scratched initials, A. St. below and dated 1796. This beautiful portrait was engraved by Sergent during his resi- dence in Basle; and was published by Méchel, December 26, 1795. Collection: Frederic R. Halsey. STIPPLE ENGRAVINGS FRANCESCO BARTOLOZZI Few artists have reached so distinguished a rank in their profession as Bartolozzi, and that in every species of engraving. His exquisitely fin- ished plates admirably represent the spirit of the originals. Eee 19 Lucy oF LEINSTER After Henry Bunbury. Proof with letters in etched script. 20 CERES PEACE After G. B. Cipriani. A pair. WILLIAM BOND ENGRAVED numerous portraits after Sir Joshua Reynolds. He was Governor of the Society of Engravers, founded in 1803, and died early in the nineteenth century. 21 Sr. CECILIA After J. Russell ADAM BUCK Born at Cork. Exhibited portraits in crayon and oil, as well as minia- tures, at the Royal Academy very frequently between 1795 and 1833. 22 THe NyMpH OF THE VINEYARD Drawn and engraved by Buck. Aquatint and stipple. 23 THe Motner’s Hope Engraved after Buck by Freeman & Stadler. Aquatint and stipple. ANTOINE CARDON Born at Brussels in 1772. Died in London, 1831. 24 CALCULATION After B. Westall. Been J. EGINTON 25 [HE SHEPHERDESS OF THE ALPS After Wm. Hamilton. Proof before letters. 26 HeBE After Wm. Hamilton. Proof before all letters. WILLIAM NELSON GARDINER Born at Dublin, 1766. Died in London, 1814. Assistant to Francesco Bartolozzi. 27 JANUARY After Wm. Hamilton. JAMES HOGG 28 Tue Hanp Marp After H. Walton. 29 SOPHIA After Revd. William Peters. FRANCIS JUKES ~ Born at Martley, in Worcestershire, 1746. Died 1812. Painter and aquatint engraver. 30 THE Broken PITCHER After J. Hoppner. Etching, aquatint and stipple. CHARLES KNIGHT ENGRAVED Chiefly after Singleton, Hoppner, Wheatley and Angelica Kaufmann. bee 31 THe Return From Market After F. Wheatley. WILLIAM NUTTER Stupiep under J. R. Smith and Bartolozzi. Born 1754, died 1802. Engraved after Reynolds, Morland, Hoppner, Russell and Singleton. 32 THE Farm Yarp Tue Axe-Housse Door After Singleton. A pair. PETER SIMON Born in London before 1750. His best work was done for Boydell’s Shakespeare Gallery. 33 Mucu Apo asout Notuinc: Hrro, Ursus, AND BratricE LisTENING After Revd. William Peters. JOHN RAPHAEL SMITH Son of Thomas Smith of Derby. Born 1752. Died, 1833. It is not known by whom he was taught mezzotint and stipple engraving, but he became eminent in both. He led a life of business and pleasure, the latter predominating. 34 Narcissa Designed and engraved by J. R. Smith. 35 SOcIETY IN SOLITUDE Designed and engraved by J. R. Smith. 36 A Lotsir Designed and engraved by J. R. Smith. Proof with title in open, etched letters. 37 FLIRTILLA Designed and engraved by J. R. Smith. [ 16 ] 38 A Maip Designed and engraved by J. R. Smith. 39 WHat You WILL Designed and engraved by J. R. Smith. 40 THE Toxpacco Box After H. Walton. WILLIAM WARD Exper brother of James Ward, and the most distinguished pupil of J. R. Smith. He lived in a world of art, his nearest connections being artists also, for he married the sister of George Morland, who, in 1786, had married Ward’s sister; and portraits of these ladies, who were dis- tinguished for personal charms, frequently appear in his subject pieces. He was appointed mezzotinto engraver to the Duke of York, and after- wards to the Prince of Wales. Died December 1st, 1826. 4r ALMEIDA Drawn and engraved by Wm. Ward. 42 Louisa Designed and engraved by Wm. Ward. 43 THoucuts on Matrimony Engraved by William Ward after J. R. Smith. EDWARD WILLIAMS Worxinc in London at the end of the eighteenth century. He married a sister of James Ward. 44 Tue Lovety BRUNETTE After William Ward. Bevan THE CRIES OF LONDON ‘‘Tsm series of pictures of ‘‘The Cries of London,’’ which appeared at the Royal Academy, 1792-5, if not exactly the rock on which the artistic fame of Wheatley is erected, may at least be described as the chief factor in the preservation of his name from oblivion. The series consists of fourteen pictures, and fourteen were actually engraved; but as there ate two versions of one subject (‘Gingerbread’), it may be that one of the set of fourteen exhibited pictures never was engraved. . . . The extra plate of ‘Gingerbread,’ to which reference has already been made, differs from the usual one in having a different background and an ad- ditional figure. . . . It may be here mentioned that the rarest single ee plate of the set is the “Turnips and Carrots . W. Roserts, F. Wheatley, R.A., His Life and Works, pp. 28-32 45 SwEET CHINA ORANGES Engraved by L. Schiavonetti. 46 Knives, Scissors AND Razors TO GRIND Engraved by G. Vendramini 47 CHERRIES Engraved by A. Cardon, directed by L. Schiavonetti. 48 Hor Spiczk GINGERBREAD Engraved by G. Vendramini. 49 TuRNIps AND CARROTS Engraved by Gaugain. ENGRAVINGS AFTER SIR JOSHUA REYNOLDS PORTRAITS 50 Tue Ricut Honsie. Lapy BEAUCHAMP Engraved in stipple, by W. Nutter. ' Isabella Ann, daughter of Charles Ingram, roth Viscount Irvine; matried 1776, Francis, Viscount Beauchamp, afterwards 2nd Marquess of Hertford. [eset 51 THe Honourasie Miss BINGHAM Engraved, in stipple by F. Bartolozzi. Anne, youngest daughter of Sir Charles Bingham, 1st Baron Lucan, and sister to Lavinia, Countess Spencer. Died unmat- ried, 1840. 52 Frances IsaBELLA KER GoRDON Engraved in stipple, by Peter Simon. Daughter of Lord William Gordon, 2nd son of the 3rd Duke of Gordon and the Hon. Frances Ingram Shepherd, daughter of Charles, 9th Lord Irvine. She died unmarried in 1831. 53 [HE CountTEss oF HARRINGTON AND CHILDREN Engraved, in stipple, by F. Bartolozzi. Proof before the title. Jane, daughter and co-heir of Sir John Fleming; married 1779, Charles, 3rd Earl of Harrington. Died 1824. The children are Lord Petersham and Hon. Lincoln Stanhope. 54 Master Henry Hoare Engraved, in stipple, by C. Wilkin. Henry, only son of Sir Richard Colt Hoare, Bart. F. R. S., the Historian of Wiltshire, by Hester, eldest daughter of William, 1st Lord Lyttleton; born 1785; married 1802, Charlotte, only daughter of Sir Edward Deny, Bart. Died, 1836. 55 lHE Rr. Honsie. Countess SPENCER Engraved, in stipple, by F. Bartolozzi. Eldest daughter of Charles, Earl of Lucan; born, 1762; married, 1781, George John, Viscount Althorp, who succeeded as 2nd Earl Spencer in 1783. 56 Honsie. Mr. LeicestER STANHOPE Engraved, in stipple, by F. Bartolozzi. Title in etched, open letters. Third son of Charles, 3rd Earl; born 1784; married, 1831, Eliza- beth, only child of W. Green, Esq., of Jamaica; succeeded, 1851, as 5th Earl of Harrington. 16.1] 57 Mr. Puitre Yorke Engraved, in stipple, by F. Bartolozzi. Afterwards Lord Royston, lost in a storm off Ltibeck; son of Philip, 3rd Earl, who was the son of Charles, second son of the 1st Earl of Hardwicke. FANCY SUBJECTS 58 FEeLina Engraved, in stipple, by Joseph Collyer. Probably a portrait of Offy Palmer. 59 THE SNAKE IN THE GRAss Engraved, in stipple, by J. R. Smith. 60 THe SNAKE IN THE GRASS Mezzotint by William Ward. Chaloner Smith No. 98. The personage whom this charming portrait represents has not been ascertained. | PORTRAIT ENGRAVINGS 61 Princess AMELIA : Engraved, in stipple, by W. Ward after H. Ramberg. Born 1783. Died 1810. Youngest daughter and last of the fifteen children of George III. 62 Mrs. BENWELL Mezzotint by W. Ward after J. Hoppner. According to Bromley, Mary Benwell, the painter of this name, who exhibited at the Artists’ Society and Academy from 1761-82; but the print more probably represents a very different person, of gteat beauty, whose character is described in ‘“Town and Country Magazine’’ for 1786. [ 20 ] 63 A Sr. JAMEs’s. BEAUTY A Sr. G1zes’s Beauty A pair. Stipple engravings by F. Bartolozzi after J. H. Benwell. Portraits of Priscilla and Elizabeth Burrough, the second and third of the seven daughters of James Burrough, Lord of the Manor of Alton Priors, County Wilts, and lineally descended on their mother’s side from the old Earls of Huntingdon. Priscilla matried Mr. Brooks, founder of Brooks Club; Elizabeth married Mr. Barnett, a solicitor. 64 Marte CurisTINE Archduchess of Austria, Duchess of Saxe-Teschen, Governor- General of the Netherlands. Engraved, in stipple, by F. Bartolozzi after Mr. le Chevliet Roslin. Sister of Marie Antoinette, Queen of France. 65 ExizaBetuH, CounTEss oF MExBorouGH Mezzotint by W. Ward after J. Hoppner. Elizabeth Stephenson, daughter of John Stephenson, of East Burnham, Co. Bucks, Esq.; married, 1782, John, 2nd Earl of Mexborough. Died, 7 June 1821, in Piccadilly, after a few hours’ illness. 66 Mrs. Mitts Mezzotint by J. R. Smith after G. Engleheart. Chaloner Smith No. 108. Only State. Maiden name, Burchell; she first married Mr. Vincent, when she was a singer at Vauxhall; in 1760, appeared at Drury Lane as Polly, in the Beggar’s Opera, in opposition to Miss Brent, at the tival house. She married, secondly, Captain Mills, one of the survivors of the Black Hole in Calcutta, and went with him to India. She died at Hampstead Road, 9th June, 1802. 67 Tue Ricgut Honorasrz Lapy Firzcinspon Engraved, in stipple, by Sedgwick after Buck. [21 | 68 Lapy HEATHCOTE Mezzotint by James Ward after J. Hoppner, R.A. Chaloner Smith No. 23. Third State. Catherine Sophia, born 1769, eldest daughter of John Manners, Esq. (of Grantham Grange, grandson of the first Duke of Rut- land), and Louisa Tollemache, Countess of Dysart; married, 1793, Sit Gilbert Heathcote, 4th Bart. Died in Grosvenor Square, 28th May, 1825. Her eldest son was created Lord Aveland in 1856. 69 Tne Rr. Honsrze. Lapy Louisa MANNERS Mezzotint by C. Turner after J. Hoppner. Whitman No. 347. Born 1745, died 1840. Maiden name Tollemache. Married (1764) John Manners of Grantham Grange, Lincs. Her brother Wil- braham, 6th Earl of Dysart, dying in 1821 without issue, the peerage devolved upon his only surviving sister, Lady Louisa Manners, who became Countess of Dysart in her own right, when seventy-six years of age. Died at Ham House, September 22, 1840. 70 THE Ricgut HonoraBLe THE CouNTEss OF DERBY Engraved, in stipple, by F. Bartolozzi after Thomas Lawrence. Elizabeth Farren, born 1759; died at Knowsley Park in 1829. She went on the stage very early and played with success until April 8, 1797, when she retired from the stage. On May 1, 1797, she married the Earl of Derby. She was a rival of Mrs. Abington. 71 Lapy DuNcANNON Engraved, in stipple, by F. Bartolozzi, after a drawing by Downman. Henrietta Frances; born 1761; daughter of John, 1st Earl Spen- cer, and younger sister of Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire; married, Nov., 1780, to Frederick, Viscount Duncannon. The * Countess died at Florence, 11th November 1811. 72 Miss FARREN Engraved, in stipple, by Collyer, after a drawing by Downman. See note under the Countess of Derby, above. [22 ] 73 H.R. H.Georcz, Prince or WALEs Painted and engraved by J. R. Smith. Chaloner Smith No. 168. Only State. While Prince of Wales he cultivated the friendship of the opposi- tion leaders, including Fox and Sheridan, and gained the ill-will of his father by his extravagance and dissolute habits. He was appointed regent when his father became insane, in 1811, and succeeded him on the throne of Great Britain and in the King- dom of Hanover, January 29, 1820. MEZZOTINTS J. GISBORNE 74 THE DETECTION Tue RECONCILIATION After R. M. Paye. A pair. J. R. SMITH 75 SOPHIA WESTERN After John Hoppner. 76 THE FortuNE TELLER After Revd. William Peters. Engraved by J. R. Smith. THE GAMESTERS After Revd. William Peters. Engraved by William Ward. A pair. 77 A Visit TO THE GRANDMOTHER After the painting by J. Northcote. Engraved by J. R. Smith. A VisiT TO THE GRANDFATHER After the painting by J. R. Smith. Engraved by William Ward. A pair. bad JAMES WARD Born in Thames Street, London, October 23rd, 1769. Died at Ches- hunt, November 23rd, 1859. Studied under John Raphael Smith and for nine years under his elder brother William Ward. As a painter of ani- mals he won a great reputation. 78 A Livery STABLE Jas. Ward del et Sculp. 79 Tue Rocxine Horse J. Ward. pinxt. 80 A CottaGER GoInGc TO MARKET A CottraGer Return’D FROM MARKET Painted and engraved by Jas. Ward. A pair. WILLIAM WARD Born in London, 1766. Died December 21st, 1826. He served an ap- prenticeship with J. R. Smith and afterwards became his assistant. He engraved many of the pictures of his brother-in-law, George Morland. 81 THe Sacap Giri After J. Hoppner. 82. MorNING, THE FIisHERMAN’S DEPARTURE EVENING, THE FIisHERMAN’s RETURN After the paintings by R. Corbould. A pair. ENGRAVINGS AFTER GEORGE MORLAND “A GREAT painter though Morland was, he owes his real popularity to the engravings which have so admirably interpreted his work. . . . As Sir Joshua Reynolds remarked of McArdell and his fellows, so Mor- land might well have said of William Ward and John Raphael Smith, ‘By these I shall be immortalized.’ Eee oy 46 6 The subjects of his pictures,’ wrote Dawe in 1806, ‘being adapted to common comprehensions, the prints engraved from them had an un- paralleled sale not only in this country, but abroad, particularly in France and Germany’. . . C. Josi, the famous Dutch collector and dealer, writes in 1821: “The craze for English engravings during the last fifty years is extraordinary. Everyone has developed a taste for them. . . . Lhey are snapped up as soon as they are seen, bring a certain and considerable profit, and few objects have ever met with so rapid and widely-extended a demand.’ “The success of the Morland engravings was doubtless due to the fact that their publishers took the tide of popular taste at the flood. It was also owing to the nature of the subjects, coming to the jaded Londoner sweet and fresh as the scent of new-mown hay. . . . Ward and Smith were the first to recognize the possibilities of Morland’s work, and to encourage him in painting subject-pictures at a time when portraits were putting money in his purse. Ward became Morland’s brother-in-law in 1786, and it was he who brought the artist to the notice of John Raphael Smith, under whom he had served his apprenticeship. It was a fortunate day forallofthem. . . . Itis after all to Ward and Smith that Morland owes most. Their mezzotints and stipple engravings are full of sym- pathy and sweetness.”’ Martin Harpie ‘*His work is a splendid possession in the national heritage of Art, and his pictures of English rural and domestic life in the eighteenth century have immortalized his memory.”’ J. T. Hersert Batty. Gzorce Morianp MEZZOTINTS 83, CHILDREN GATHERING BLACKBERRIES Engraved by G. Dawe. 84 CHILDREN NuTTING Engraved by E. Dayes. 85 Nurse AND CHILDREN IN THE FIELDs Engraved by G. Keating. eas 4 86 A Party ANGLING Engraved by G. Keating. THe ANGLERS REPAST Engraved by William Ward. A pair. 87 SMUGGLERS FisHERMEN Engraved by J. Ward. A pair. STIPPLE ENGRAVINGS 88 Sr. James's Park A TEA GARDEN Engraved by F. D. Soiron. A pair. 89 Rustic EMPLOYMENT RuraLt AMUSEMENT Engraved by J. R. Smith. A pair. 90 Duck SHOOTING Published by T. Simpson, April 21, 1790. THOMAS ROWLANDSON ‘A DRAUGHTSMAN Who begins very near Watteau and ends amazingly near Daumier, traversing the intervening gulf parallel with Hokusai, surely is worthy of our attention. ‘The recorded facts of Thomas Rowlandson’s life are few, and Joseph Grego, who wrote a learned work on Rowlandson as caricaturist in 1880, was able to add little in the way of personalia to the testimony of Henry Angelo, the fencing master, and of that anonymous intimate who wrote the obituary for the Gentleman's Magazine. In fact Rowlandson was not a biographer’s artist. Between his art, conviviality and gaming, [ 26 ] he too impartially lavished his great energies. He lived far too keenly to wish to analyze or even confront the manner of his life. Except for Angelo, the publisher Ackermann, and a group of fellow-illustrators, equally unchronicled men, he seems to have had no intimates. In his forty-fourth year, to be sure, he married a Miss Stead, from the respect- able suburb of Camberwell, but we have no hint as to how she managed or endured her exuberant partner. Doubtless it was too late to reform the most honorable of London gamesters. More than once, surely, he had to repeat to her the saying quoted in his obituary, ‘I have played the fool, but here’—holding up his pencils—‘is my resource’.’’ Frank Jewett Matuer, Jr. Some Drawings by Thomas Rowlandson gt Vaux-Hatr “Vauxhall Gardens, which is possibly the best recognized of Row- landson’s more aspiring compositions, was engraved by R. Pollard, aquatinted to resemble the drawing, by F. Jukes, and published under the auspices of John Raphael Smith, also a con- vivial companion, a leading spirit amongst the careless souls who formed Rowlandson’s social surroundings. . . . “Angelo, in his Reminiscences, which touch upon every topic of the time, . . . recounts the partiality which he and Rowland- son entertained for the popular resort of the past. . . . ‘It was then crowded from four to six with gentry, demireps, appren- tices, shopboys, etc. Crowds of citizens were to be seen trudging home with their wives andchildren. Rowlandson, theartist, and myself have often been there, and he has found plenty of employ- ment for his pencil.’ "The Chef-d’ GEuvre of his caricatures, which is still in print, is his drawing of Vauxhall, in which he has introduced a variety of characters known at the time, particularly that of my old school- Pee TL? fellow at Eton, Major Topham, the macaroni of the day’. JosepH Greco. Rowlandson the Caricaturist The singer is Mrs. Weichsel, mother of the great Mrs. Billington, the pride of English operatic celebrities. The two ladies in the center of the picture are the fascinating Duchess of Devonshire and her sister, Lady Duncannon. Captain Topham is standing, dressed in a smart uniform, quizzing the ladies through his glass. The stout old commander, on the Duchess’s right, is Admiral Paisley; the clerical person over the shoulder of Lady Duncannon is a free rendering of Bate Dudley, the hero of a somewhat notorious Vauxhall adventure. Another conspicuous group (272i) introduces George, Prince of Wales, addressing himself covertly to the captivating Mrs. Robinson, Perdita. Within a supper box, to the left, are Doctor Johnson, Boswell, Mrs. Thrale and Oliver Goldsmith. : SPORTING PRINTS ‘Year by year old sporting prints are being accorded a larger measure of public appreciation. . . . Many, not sportsmen themselves, or ad- dicted to hunting, shooting or racing, are included amongst the ad- mirers of these old world scenes, a number of which so vividly recall the full-blooded and robust life of a former generation, which in its amuse- ments and habits differed so greatly from our own. ‘England at the end of the eighteenth and beginning of the nineteenth centuries was a sporting country in a different sense from to-day. The majority of hunting men, for instance, were squires who lived on their estates, a number of whom were well known as characters throughout the countryside. Hunting, with them, amounted occasionally to a sort of religion, and was not merely a pastime indulged in for purposes of relaxation and health. A full-blooded jolly lot, not a few of them hardly visited London at all, being well content to live and die amidst the rural surroundings which they loved so well. . . . It is therefore but natural that old sporting prints, many of which are imbued with a spirit of vivacity and life, constitute a source of real attraction to those interested in a more individualistic past. From these prints also can be reconstituted the travelling of past days when the sound of the coach-horn enlivened many a country road, and the handling of the ribbons was an accomplishment at which many well-known sportsmen loved to shine.’’ Ratpx Nevitx: Old Sporting Prints BOXING 92 Tue Great Ficut Between Broome anp HANNAN FOR {.1,000. Which took place Janr. 26th, 1841, in the presence of Thousands of Spectators, at New Park Farm, near Bicester, Oxon, on the borders of Buckinghamshire. Painted by H. Heath. Engraved by C. Hunt. London. Published June 1, 1841, by J. Moore. [28 ] COACHING JACQUES LOUIS AGASSE 93 Matt Coacu Pau oy |. 1. A.C). L. Agasse). Engraved by F. C. L. (F. C. Lewis.) London. Published October 1, 1820, by J. Watson, 7 Vere Street, Bond Street. 94 Matt Coacu Painted by J. L. A. (J. L Agasse). Engraved by M. Dubourg, London. Published April 7, 1824, by J. Watson 7. Vere Street, Bond Street. ROBERT HAVELL 95 THE Reapinc CoacHEs London. Published, Septr. 1, 1821, by R. Havell. 96 A Lonpon Matt anp StaGE Coacu Published Janr. 1, 1825, by R. Havell. CHARLES HUNT 97 [HE Rep Rover, SourHAMPTON CoacH Engraved by Chas. Hunt. London. Published Augt. 1st, 1836, by W. Soffe, 380 Strand. 98 Tue Birto Day TEAM Drawn and engraved by Chas. Hunt. Published by G. S. Tregear, 96 Cheapside, London, where may be had the celebrated Print of ‘“The Dying Fox Hunter,”’ also “The Roadsters.”’ 99 Tue RoapstTERs Drawn and engraved by Chas. Hunt. Published by G. S. Tregear, 96 Cheapside, London, where may be had the celebrated Print of ‘“The Dying Fox Hunter.”’ Bets a C. B. NEWHOUSE 100 OpposITION CoaAcHEs AT SPEED Painted by C. Newhouse. Engraved by F. Rosenberg. London. Published Febr. 1832, by Jonn Watson, 7 Vere Stt Cavendish Sq¢ tor No TIME TO SPARE FOR REFRESHMENT, OVERTAKEN BY THE OPPOSITION UnbER WEIGH WITHOUT A Pinot A pair. Painted by C. B. Newhouse. Engraved by J. Harris, London. Published Septr. 30, 1836, by Ackermann & Co., 96 Strand. 102 Scottish ELEcTION: EscorTING THE RivAL CANDIDATES TO THE PLAcE oF NOMINATION ScOTTIsH ELECTION: THE STAGE COACH LEAVING WITH THE RESULT OF THE POLL A pair. . Drawn by C. B. Newhouse. Engraved by C. Rosenburg. JAMES POLLARD 103 STAGE Coacu SETTING OFF Js. Pollard delt. R. Havell Fect. Pubd. May 29, 1816, by R. Pollard, Holloway near London. 104 His Majesty Kinc Grorce IV Travettinc—View Hype Park Pollard Junr. delt. M. Dubourg Sculpt. London, Published and sold Jany 1. 1821 by Edwd. Orme. Pub- lisher to the King, Bond Street, corner of Brook Street. 105 STAGE CoacH Painted by J. Pollard. Engraved by Dubourg. London. Published Nov. 1. 1822, by Jona Watson, 7 Vere Street, Bond Street. [ 30 ] 106 Tue Mair Coacu IN A Drirt or SNow Painted by James Pollard. Engraved by G. Reeves. London. Published Sepr 21, 1825, by J. Watson. 7 Vere Street. 107 THe Mart Coacw CHANGING Horszs Painted by James Pollard. Engraved by G. Reeves. London. Published Sep. 21, 1825, by J. Watson, 7 Vere Street. 108 THE ELEPHANT AND CASTLE ON THE BRIGHTON RoapD Painted by James Pollard. Engraved by Theodore Fielding. London. Published, Feb. 7 1826, by J. Watson, 7 Vere Street. 109 Main Beninp Time Painted by J. Pollard. Engraved by Reeves. Published Novr 30, 1831, by T. Helme, at his Picture Frame and Looking Glass Manufactory, 75 Tabernacle Square, Old Street Road. 110 [HE CoacH AND Horsss, ILForD Painted by J. Pollard. Publisd by T. Helme, April 9th, 1832, at his Picture Frame Manufactory, 15 Tabernacle Square, Old St. Road. III QuicKsILVER Royat Mai Painted by J. Pollard. Engraved by C. Hunt. London. Published November 1st, 1835, by Ackermann & Co., 96 Strand. G. TREGEAR 112 THE EaGLe Paris AND Dovor Coacu Designed by G. Tregear. Engraved by Hy. Alken. London. Published by G. Tregear, 104 St. Martins Lane, 1827. bead COURSING 113, COURSING Goinc Out FINDING Tue Hare’s Last Errort Tue DeatH Painted by D. Wolstenholme. Engraved by T. Sutherland. London. Published at R. Ackermann’s, 101 Strand, May 1,1823. Set of four. FISHING 114 FisHERMEN Painted by P. Reinagle, R.A. Engraved by J. Hassell & W. Nicholls. London: Pubd. May 2, 1814, by J. Hassell & T. Rickards, 344 Strand. FOX HUNTING 115 HuNTERs AT COVER SIDE S. Alkins, Pinxt. J. Pollard Sculpt. BREAKING COVER Sartorius Pinx. Pollard Sculpt. Furi Cry Pollard Pinxt. Pollard Sculpt. Tue DeatTH Gill Esqr. Pinxt. Pollard Sculpt. London. Published 1st February 1822, by S. Knights, Sweetings Alley, Royal Exchange. Set of four. [ 32 J RACING HENRY ALKEN 116 Epsom Races Witn THE Horszs PREPARING TO START FOR THE Two Mite Heat H. Alken delt. TT. Sutherland sculp. Epsom Races With Mr. THorNHILL’s CHESTNUT CoLT SAM, BEATING LorD DaRLINGTON’s GREY, AND SIR JouN SHELLY’s Prince Paut For THE DeErRBy STAKEs, May 28th, 1818 H. Alken delt. T. Sutherland sculp. London. Published Feby. 9th, 1819, by T. & J. Fuller, at their Sporting Galleries, 34 Rathbone Place. A pair. J. BOULTBEE 117 GOHANNA, WITH Mr. Tuomas Birp, AND A VIEW OF GOHANNA Farm AND LODGEs Painted by J. Boultbee. Engraved by Jukes and Sargent. Published Decr. 20, 1808, by J. Boultbee, Quorndon, near Loughborough. Gr KARP 118 Bricguton Hurpzz Race, Dec. 20TH, 1833 THE START Cominc In Drawn by G. Earp from a sketch by W. H. Mason. Engraved by C. Hunt. Published by W. H. Mason (Printseller & Publisher to the Queen) at his Repository of Arts, 1 Ship St., Brighton. A pair. ‘Two other attractive oblong coloured prints are a pair by C. Hunt, after Earp, representing the Brighton Hurdle Race. These are rarely to be met with.”’ Rarex Nevity. Old English Sporting Prints and their History. Page 19 Bea JOHN FREDERICK HERRING Born in Surrey, 1795. Until the age of eighteen his life was passed in London, and he then found employment in coach-painting at Doncaster. He next worked as a stage-coachman, and for years drove the ‘‘York and London Highflyer,’’ but he devoted all his leisure time to painting, be- coming known as the ‘‘artist coachman.’’ By the assistance of friends, he at last gave up the reins, and obtained some instruction from Abra- ham Cooper, the only art education he ever received. His earlier works were confined to race-horses, and for thirty three successive years he painted the winner of the St. Leger. He left Doncaster in 1830, and after a stay of about three years at Newmarket, settled in London, exhibiting at the Royal Academy from 1826, at the British Institution, and also at the Society of British Artists, of which he was a member from 1841 to 1852. His art was very popular, and he received commissions from George IV, Queen Victoria, and the Duke of Orleans. He died at Tun- bridge Wells in 1865. 119 [HE WINNERS OF THE GREAT St. LEGER STAKES AT DONCASTER 1815 to 1839. The Series of Twenty-five. Painted by Mr. Herring, Doncaster. Engraved by Mr. Suther- land; R. G. Reeve; C. Hunt; R. W. Smart & C. Hunt. London, Pubd by S. & J. Fuller at their Sporting Gallery, 34 Rathbone Place. Set of Subscriber’s proofs, with Pedigrees; the odds; and notes on the running. JAMES POLLARD 120 Sir JosHUA AND FitHo pa Puta Pollard delt. | Rosenbourg, sculpt. Published & Sold, July 1, 1816, by Edwd. Orme, Bond Street, corner of Brook Street, London. 121 Epsom Races Drawn and engraved by James Pollard. Pubd. Apl. 24, 1818, by R. Pollard, Hollaway, near London. Bees! 122 Ascot Hratu Races Drawn and engraved by James Pollard. Pubd. Sepr. 28, 1818, by R. Pollard, Holloway, near London. 123 Tne Race ror THE GoLp Cup at Ascor, 1829 Painted by James Pollard. Engraved by J. Edge. London. Published July 24th, 1829, by Thos. McLean, 26 Hay- market, and Giraldon Bovinet a Paris. 124 THE CELEBRATED HorsE PLENIPOTENTIARY AT Epsom Races, BEATING SHILALAH AND GLENCO J. Pollard, Delin. H. Pyall, Sculp. London. Published June 4th, 1834, by Thos. McLean, 26 Hay- market. 125 Epsom Races Now Tuey’rE OFF J. Pollard Delin. Smart & Hunt, sculpt. London. Published June 2, 1834, by S & J Fuller at their Sporting Gallery, 34 Rathbone Place. 126 A View OF THE GRAND STAND, DONCASTER, WITH Por- TRAITS OF THE WINNING HorsEs OF THE GREAT ST. LEGER STAKES, FROM 1815 J. Pollard Delt. R. Pyall, Sculpt. Published Jany 1835, by Thos. McLean, 26 Haymarket, London. 127 Goopwoop Races J. Pollard; Pinxt. H. Pyall, Sculpt. London. Published Feby 14, 1838, by Thos. McLean, 26 Hay- market. F. C. TURNER 128 Heaton Park Raczs, 1835 Painted by F. C. Turner. Engraved by R. G. Reeve. Published by J. McCormick, 147 Strand, London. Esa SHOOTING I29 IST OF SEPTEMBER. Ist OF OCTOBER. Set of four. Painted by S. J. E. Jones. Engraved by Geo. Hunt. London. Published by J. Moore, 1 West Street, upper St. Mar- tin’s Lane, 1827. | 130 SHOOTING Set of four. Engraved by Dean Wolstenholme, Junior, from the paintings by his father, Dean Wolstenholme, Senior. ‘A sporting artist, whose work was only second to that of Henry Alken was Dean Wolstenholme, Senior. Born in Yorkshire in 1757, this artist was originally a man of independent means, whose time was largely devoted to sport. Originally he painted only for amusement, occasionally presenting his friends with portraits of favorite horses or hounds. Ruined by lawsuits, how- ever, he determined to make painting his profession, thereby verifying the prediction of Sir Joshua Reynolds, who had early observed the great talent of Wolstenholme, and predicted that he would in time develop into a serious painter.’ Rautpeu NEVILL. STAG HUNTING 131 THE Eart or Dersy’s Srac Hounps Painted by Js. Barenger. Engraved by R. Woodman. Published May 15, 1823, by I. Griffin, Carshalton, Surry. Portraits of Lord Stanley; The Honble. E. Stanley; Jonathan Griffin, Huntsman; and the First Whipper-in. 363)