Richard Earlom

{{Short description|English mezzotinter}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}

File:Portrait of Richard Earlom Esqr (4674092).jpg after Gilbert Stuart, Richard Earlom, 1819, mezzotint, National Library of Wales]]

File:Richard Earlom - A Blacksmith's Shop.jpg (1771), after a painting by Joseph Wright.]]

File:The Academicians of the Royal Academy by Richard Earlom 1773.jpg by Johan Joseph Zoffany]]

Richard Earlom (bapt. 14 May 1743{{snd}}9 October 1822) was an English mezzotinter.{{harvnb|RAAC staff}} for the full dates of birth and death.

Biography

Earlom was born and died in London. His natural faculty for art appears to have been first called into exercise by his admiration for the lord mayor's state coach, which had just been decorated by Giovanni Battista Cipriani. He tried to copy the paintings, and was sent to study under Cipriani. He displayed great skill as a draughtsman, and at the same time acquired without assistance the art of mezzotint.{{sfn|Chisholm|1911|p=797}}

In 1765, Earlom was employed by Alderman Boydell, a publisher and promoter of the fine arts, to make a series of drawings from the pictures at Houghton Hall; and these he engraved in mezzotint. His best works are perhaps the fruit and flower pieces after the Dutch artists Van Os and Jan van Huysum. Among his historical and figure subjects are Agrippina, after Benjamin West; Love in Bondage, after Guido Reni; the Royal Academy, the Embassy of Hyderbeck to meet Lord Cornwallis, Colonel Mordant's Cock Fight and a Tiger Hunt, all after Johan Zoffany, and Lord Heathfield, after Sir Joshua Reynolds.{{sfn|Chisholm|1911|p=797}}

''Liber Veritatis''

File:Liber veritatis holy family by EARLOM, RICHARD - GMII.jpg # 154, 1776]]

Earlom was commissioned by John Boydell to copy all 200 drawings of Claude Lorraine's record of his paintings as prints, which were published from 1774 to 1777, when a collected edition in two volumes was published as Liber Veritatis. Or, A Collection of Two Hundred Prints, After the Original Designs of Claude le Lorrain, in the Collection of His Grace the Duke of Devonshire, Executed by Richard Earlom, in the Manner and Taste of the Drawings.... with the inscription on the reverses, a "descriptive catalogue of each print" and the current owner, where it was known. A further volume of 100 prints after other Claude drawings from various British collections was added in 1819, also using "Liber Veritas" as its title.Wilcox; [https://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=3017844&partId=1&searchText=1872,1012.4663&museumno=1872,1012.4663&page=1 British Museum page on the prints] The title Liber Veritatis was invented for these reproductions, but is now used for the originals as well. These were then in a rebound book at Devonshire House in London; they are now in the British Museum.

The prints used etching for Claude's pen lines, and mezzotint for the ink washes, giving a good impression of the originals.Wilcox; [https://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=3017844&partId=1&searchText=1872,1012.4663&museumno=1872,1012.4663&page=1 British Museum page on the prints] All used brown ink on white paper, so disregarding the blue of half the original pages. The prints were a huge success, reprinted and the plates reworked to give increasingly detailed reproductions. They were recommended by drawing teachers as models for copying, and influenced the technique of English watercolour artists in particular, for example Francis Towne.Wilcox; [http://www.donaldheald.com/pages/books/26090/dit-le-lorrain-claude-gellee-c-artist-richard-earlom-engraver/liber-veritatis-or-a-collection-of-prints-after-the-original-designs-of-claude-le-lorrain-in-the Later edition], on sale for $19,500 in 2016

Notes

{{Reflist}}

References

  • {{cite web|author=RAAC staff| url=https://www.royalacademy.org.uk/art-artists/name/richard-earlom

|title=Richard Earlom |publisher=Royal Academy of Arts Collections|access-date=27 December 2018}}

Attribution:

  • {{EB1911|wstitle=Earlom, Richard |volume=8|page=797}}

Further reading

  • {{Cite book|last=Clayton|first=Timothy|title=The English Print, 1688–1802|publisher=Yale University Press|year=1997|isbn=0-300-06650-3|location=London, New Haven}}
  • {{cite encyclopedia|last=Miller|first=Elizabeth|date=1996|url=https://archive.org/details/dictionaryofart09turn/page/505/mode/1up|title=Earlom, Richard|editor-last=Turner|editor-first=Jane|encyclopedia=The Dictionary of Art|volume=9|location=New York|publisher=Grove's Dictionaries|page=505|isbn=1-884446-00-0|oclc=1033638391|via=the Internet Archive}}
  • {{cite encyclopedia|last=Myrone|first=Martin|date=2004|title=Boydell, John, engravers|url=https://archive.org/details/oxforddictionary07matt/page/56/mode/2up|encyclopedia=Oxford Dictionary of National Biography|volume=7|editor-last=Matthew|editor-first=H. C. G.|editor-last2=Harrison|name-list-style=amp|editor-first2=Brian|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=Oxford, New York|pages=56–59|isbn=0-19-861357-1|oclc=1035755389|via=the Internet Archive}}

{{DNB poster|Earlom, Richard}}

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Category:1743 births

Category:1822 deaths

Category:18th-century English male artists

Category:18th-century English engravers

Category:19th-century English male artists

Category:19th-century English engravers

Category:Artists from London