Thomas Bewick (1753 1828) began his career as an apprentice to the engraver and businessman Ralph Beilby (1743 1817). Having entered into a partnership and illustrated more than eighty small books for children, they decided to work together on this natural history, with Beilby drafting the descriptions and Bewick providing wood engravings and textual revisions. It was first published in 1790, cementing Bewick's reputation as an engraver of the natural world. Although by the end of 1797 the partnership had foundered, the book ran to seven editions and sold some 14,000 copies. Its aim was to...
Thomas Bewick (1753 1828) began his career as an apprentice to the engraver and businessman Ralph Beilby (1743 1817). Having entered into a partnershi...
Synonymous with finely crafted wood engravings of the natural world, Thomas Bewick (1753 1828) perfected an instantly recognisable style which was to influence book illustration well into the nineteenth century. Begun in November 1822, at the behest of his daughter Jane, and completed in 1828, Bewick's autobiography was first published in 1862. The opening chapters recall vividly his early life on Tyneside, his interest in the natural world, his passion for drawing, and his apprenticeship with engraver Ralph Beilby in Newcastle, where he would learn his trade and then work in fruitful...
Synonymous with finely crafted wood engravings of the natural world, Thomas Bewick (1753 1828) perfected an instantly recognisable style which was to ...