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Treatise on Wood Engraving, Historical and Practical : With Upwards of Three Hundred Illustrations, Engraved on Wood

Part of the Cambridge Library Collection - History of Printing, Publishing and Libraries series
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A Treatise on Wood Engraving, Historical and Practical (1839), combines the practical knowledge of an engraver with the critical inquiry of an historian.

Compiled and edited by William Andrew Chatto, an established author with an interest in woodcuts, the book was originally conceived by the wood-engraver John Jackson, who provided the book's more than three hundred engravings.

Roughly three quarters of the Treatise is concerned with the historical evolution of engraving, from the Egyptian hieroglyph stamps held at the British Museum through the masterful works of Albrecht Dürer to the decline and reinvigoration of the art in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.

Practical analysis permeates the text as a whole, with the final section explaining more fully how a block is chosen, cut, and even repaired.

The book is therefore of interest to art historians, historians of the book, and even artist practitioners interested in nineteenth-century methods.

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£40.99
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108009158 / 9781108009157
Paperback / softback
761.209
04/03/2010
United Kingdom
784 pages, 6 Line drawings, color; 253 Line drawings, black and white
152 x 229 mm, 1030 grams