The Etching Club

19th-century artists' society in London From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Etching Club (also known as Etching Club, the London Etching Club, and the British Etching Club; or the Junior Etching Club for its younger membership grouped separately) was an artists' society founded in London, England, in 1838 by Charles West Cope. It was part of the Etching Revival in printmaking. The club published illustrated editions of works by authors such as Oliver Goldsmith, Shakespeare, John Milton and Thomas Gray in small editions, normally using actual etchings rather reproductions of them by other techniques. It effectively ceased to exist in 1878.[1]

Samuel Palmer, The Lonely Tower, 1879
Charles West Cope, The Stolen Kiss, 1850, published by The Etching Club, 1857

Membership

Publications of The Etching Club

Publications of the Junior Etching Club

  • Junior Etching Club. Passages from Modern English Poets (Forty-Seven Etchings) (London: William Tegg, 1875); Alaric Alexander Watts.

References and bibliography

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI