Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Engraved Clerical Portraiture in England, c. 1660–1850
View through CrossRef
Architecture and visual arts in general have been subjects of a growing body of recent scholarship connected with the ecclesiastical history of the ‘Long Eighteenth Century’, but little attention has been given to portraiture. Although honourable mention should be made of pioneering work by John Ingamells on painted episcopal portraits, and by Peter Forsaith, very recently, on Methodist portrait prints, other aspects of this extensive subject still await investigation. The article outlines the development of engraved portrayal of clergy, mainly of the Church of England, during the two centuries before production of multiple images was taken over by photography, and indicates how the quantity, variety, and dissemination of such material can provide some index of the priorities of a pre-photographic age. It does not aim to be a comprehensive or a complete survey of the corpus of engraved portraiture; nevertheless, this article provides an initial guide to the abundance of previously unexplored illustrative material, and may suggest a framework for further exploration. It is hoped that future scholars will build on this initial work to enable a complete catalogue of such images to be developed and further explored.
Title: Engraved Clerical Portraiture in England, c. 1660–1850
Description:
Architecture and visual arts in general have been subjects of a growing body of recent scholarship connected with the ecclesiastical history of the ‘Long Eighteenth Century’, but little attention has been given to portraiture.
Although honourable mention should be made of pioneering work by John Ingamells on painted episcopal portraits, and by Peter Forsaith, very recently, on Methodist portrait prints, other aspects of this extensive subject still await investigation.
The article outlines the development of engraved portrayal of clergy, mainly of the Church of England, during the two centuries before production of multiple images was taken over by photography, and indicates how the quantity, variety, and dissemination of such material can provide some index of the priorities of a pre-photographic age.
It does not aim to be a comprehensive or a complete survey of the corpus of engraved portraiture; nevertheless, this article provides an initial guide to the abundance of previously unexplored illustrative material, and may suggest a framework for further exploration.
It is hoped that future scholars will build on this initial work to enable a complete catalogue of such images to be developed and further explored.
Related Results
Expressions of “Voice” in Portraiture
Expressions of “Voice” in Portraiture
The various ways in which the researcher negotiates “voice are the focus of this article. The six aspects of “voice” as defined by portraiture are manifested through the researcher...
George Eliot’s and George Henry Lewes’s Copies of Her Work
George Eliot’s and George Henry Lewes’s Copies of Her Work
Abstract
Lot 529 of the Sotheby’s 27 June 1923, sale of George Eliot’s and George Henry Lewes’s work consisted of: “Eliot (George) Scenes of Clerical Life, 2 vols., ...
Rural Modernity and the Wood Engraving Revival in Interwar England
Rural Modernity and the Wood Engraving Revival in Interwar England
‘Rural Modernity and the Wood Engraving Revival in Interwar England’ brings analysis of a specific kind of visual-verbal text, wood-engraved books about the English countryside, an...
Face Value: Toward a Theory of Eighteenth-Century Portraiture
Face Value: Toward a Theory of Eighteenth-Century Portraiture
This essay postulates a field theory of the portrait, one capable of explaining both portrait objects and the forces to which they were subject. It does so not with the intention o...
Reading Words alongside Images: Ali Smith and Visual Portraiture
Reading Words alongside Images: Ali Smith and Visual Portraiture
AbstractThis article reads description in Ali Smith's fiction alongside the techniques and concerns of the visual portraiture tradition. It deploys portraiture as a guiding framewo...
The Participant as Ally and Essentialist Portraiture
The Participant as Ally and Essentialist Portraiture
This article describes some of the essential features of a methodological approach to studying individuals’ deeper motivations and experiences. The overall approach consists of “in...
A Manifesto of Living Self-portraiture (Identity, Transformation, and Performance)
A Manifesto of Living Self-portraiture (Identity, Transformation, and Performance)
In an era when blogging, Facebook, and Twitter are more and more becoming the ubiquitous means of expression for an entire generation, The Manifesto of Living Self-portraiture illu...
Noordnederlandse majolica: kast opruimen
Noordnederlandse majolica: kast opruimen
AbstractThis article has been prompted by two recent works on the subject, the new and greatly expanded version published in 1981 of Nederlandse majolica by Dingeman Korf, a pionee...