The Etchings of Rembrandt
The Etchings of Rembrandt
The Etchings of Rembrandt
THF LWRARY
BRIGHAM
. USltT
PROVO, UTAH
75
#
/-
3 THE
PORTFOLIO
MONOGRAPHS ON ARTISTIC
SUBJECTS
EDITED BY P. G. HAMERTON
J
REMBRANDT'S ETCHINGS
By P. G. HAMERTON
MALTA
By W. K. R. BEDFORD, M.A.
WEDWGOOD
By A. H. CHURCH, F.R.S.
LONDON
SEELEY AND CO., LIMITED, ESSEX STREET, STRAND
NEW YORK : MACMILLAN AND CO.
1894
THE
LIBRARY ,
;KIGHAM
YOUNG
UNIVI-XSITT
PROVO,
UTAH
_
THE ETCHINGS
OF
REMBRANDT
By
P. G. HAMERTON
Author
of
"
Etching & Etchers
"
Honorary Fellow
of
the Royal Society
of
Painter-Etchers
LONDON
SEELEY
AND CO. LIMITED, ESSEX STREET, STRAND
NEW YORK, MACMILLAN AND CO.
1894
/*Vr
THE DATE OF REMBRANDT'S BIRTH
The date 1607 is according to Vosmacr. Other writers have
given 1606, and this has been accepted by Mr. Haden and M.
Michel. I had not space to enter into the controversy, and
merely trusted the Dutch biographer.
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
PLATES ETCHED IN FACSIMILE BY AMAND DURAND.
PAGE
Rembrandt with Broad Hat and' Embroidered Mantle. B. 7. M. 52
Frontispiece.
The Rat Killer. B. 121. M. 261 20
Johannes Lutma. B. 276. M. 171 56
Rembrandt's Mother, seated, looking to the Right. B.
343.
M.
54
80
ILLUSTRATIONS IN THE TEXT.
PAGE
Rembrandt, Full Face, Laughing. B. 316. M. 25
16
Rembrandt with an Air of Grimace. B. 10. M. 23
16
Rembrandt with Haggard Eyes. B. 320. M. 24
16
Two Beggars, a Man and a Woman Conversing. B. 164. M.
37 17
A View of Amsterdam. B. 210. M.
304
.'
18
An Old Woman, etched no lower than the Chin. B.
351.
M. 101 21
Three Heads of Women. B. 367. M. 115 23
A Young Woman reading. B.
345.
M. 109 24
The Mountebank. B. 129. M. 117 25
The Prodigal Son. B. 91. M. 201
26
The Angel ascending from Tobit and his Family. B.
43.
M. 213
34
The Resurrection of Lazarus, A Small Print. B. 72. M. 215 36
The Three Trees. B. 212. M.
309
3&
Six's Bridge. B. 208. M.
313
4
Landscape with a Canal and Large Boat. B. 236. M.
323 44
B 2
4
ILLUSTRATIONS IN THE TEXT
PAGE
Tobit Blind, with the Dog. B. 42. M. 226
45
Jesus disputing with the Doctors : the Larger Plate. B. 65. M. 231 46
David on his Knees. B. 41. M. 232 47
The Descent from the Cross : a Night Piece. B. 83. M. 242
49
The Flight into Egypt : the Holy Family crossing a Rill. B.
55.
M. 240 ... 51
Jesus and His Parents returning from Jerusalem. B. 60. M.
244 52
Christ and the Disciples at Emmaus. B. 87. M.
237 53
Abraham's Sacrifice. B.
35.
M. 246
54
An Old Man with a Short Straight Beard. B. 306. M. 120
59
A Sheet of Sketches, afterwards divided into Five. B. 366. M. 83 62
Three Peasants Travelling. B. 1
3
I. M. 1
53 64
Profile of a Bald Man with a Jewelled Chain. B. 292, M.
39
.
65
An Old Woman Sleeping. B. 350. M. 116 66
A Battle Piece. B. 117. M.
275 67
Christ's Body carried to the Tomb. B. 84. M. 217 69
A Village with a River and a Sailing Vessel. B. 228. M.
314
73
Sketch of a Dog. B. 371. M. 266
74
Rembrandt with Moustache and Small Beard. B. 2. M. 106
79
A Jew
with a High Cap. B. 133. M. 140 81
A Sketch for the Hundred Guilder Print 82
Landscape with a Fisherman in a Boat. B. 243. M.
19 89
THE
ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
PART I
THE PLATES CONSIDERED WITH REFERENCE TO THE
ARTIST'S BIOGRAPHY
I
This little treatise is intended to be an introduction to the study of
the etched work of Rembrandt. The notice of him in Etching and
Etchers was of necessity no more than a short account of what he had
done, with a special mention of a few representative plates
;
the cata-
logues of Bartsch, Claussin, Wilson, Charles Blanc, Middleton, and Dutuit,
are too voluminous and important to be convenient as handbooks,
besides being too mechanical in arrangement for consecutive reading.
A memorable exhibition of Rembrandt's etchings was held at the
Burlington Fine Arts Club in the year
1877,
and the catalogue of it
is well known, for two special reasons, to all serious students of
Rembrandt, both in England and on the Continent. The first of these
reasons is the adoption, at that time unprecedented, of the chronological
order in preference to the old classification by subject, and the second is
the Introduction by Mr. Seymour Haden, in which he expressed his
disbelief in the authenticity of certain famous plates that had been ad-
mitted into all previous catalogues. Mr. Haden's argument is of such
importance that no subsequent writer can afford to pass it in silence,
but it is fully intelligible, in all its bearings, only by advanced students.
Besides this, the catalogue in which it appeared was privately printed for
the Club, and is not generally accessible. The same objection, so far as
ordinary English readers are concerned, applies even to some of the
6
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
published contributions to Rembrandt literature, which are costly, and
printed in foreign languages. For example, the French catalogue by
Dutuit, with heliographic reproductions by Charreyre, is sold at six
hundred francs. It has therefore seemed to us that there was room for a
handbook to the etchings of Rembrandt, published at a low price, and
containing a synoptic account arranged in a readable form, and in such
a manner that any one who perused it might find himself, with little
effort, so far acquainted with the subject that no part of Rembrandt's
great performance as an etcher would seem absolutely strange to him.
The systematic study of the works of a great etcher is seldom
undertaken by lovers of art who are not led to it by the requirements of
a critic or a collector, and yet this systematic study, though it may seem
tedious to the amateur, and pedantic to the artist, and though it may
be regarded with the most complete indifference by the public generally,
has its own rewards to offer in the additional clearness which it imparts
to the whole subject, and in the enhanced interest that every separate
etching gains from being known in connection with the rest. This
kind of study would be impossible for us without the help of the
minutely detailed information that the zealous industry of catalogue-
makers has accumulated for our use. We are, indeed, infinitely their
debtors, for without their labours of love, extending, in some cases, over
many years, and rewarded only by the appreciation of the few who know
all that such toil involves, the student could never gain a comprehensive
view of the total production of a great artist. Even if he had access
to a complete collection, it would be impossible for him to know that it
was complete.
I have just alluded to two methods in the arrangement of a catalogue,
the chronological order and classification by subject. Even in a brief
treatise like the present some definite system is necessary, and I have
decided to adopt three systems, each for one part of my essay, which will
keep them as distinct from each other as possible, both for the reader's
convenience and my own. The first is chronological so as to connect the
etchings, or many of them, with the inspiring and affecting story of
Rembrandt's courageous and troubled existence. One of the great
artist's biographers, M. Emile Michel, says that Rembrandt has himself
almost invariably enlightened us as to the date of his works, but this,
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
7
with regard at least to the etchings, is certainly saying too much and
therefore it is impossible for me to follow the chronological method
exclusively. M. Dutuit, on the other hand, observes that nearly two-
thirds of Rembrandt's etchings are without date. This statement is,
however, a very great exaggeration of their still too frequent datelessness.
Mr. Middleton, in his catalogue, admits three hundred and twenty-nine
plates as genuine. Out of these, one hundred and eighty-one are dated,
so that the dated plates are in the majority and sufficiently abundant
to afford in themselves all that is needed for reference in the first,
or biographical, portion of this essay, especially considering that
the author, having a limited space at his command, is not under
any obligation to refer to everything that Rembrandt executed.
Those who try to make complete chronological catalogues are sorely
tempted to assign dates that must in many instances be purely, if
not wildly, conjectural. Each instance would require to be supported
by a separate argument which is seldom given, so that the reader sees that
the date is assumed but does not often know why it is assumed. The
compiler has, no doubt, gone through a process of reasoning that
is satisfactory to himself and might be so to his readers if their faith
were not disturbed by other equally authorised compilers. Our teachers
do, indeed, arrive at the most divergent and contradictory conclusions.
The differences between Vosmaer and Middleton are extremely frequent,
and in several instances so wide that it would seem as if there were
nothing in the changing manner of Rembrandt's workmanship, or in
his tastes and interests so far as the choice of subject is concerned, to
justify one in fixing a date within a year or two, or even a decade.
For example there is the well-known plate of The Triumph
of
Mordecai
to which Vosmaer assigns 1640 or from that to 1645,
whereas
Middleton fixes 1651. The Adoration
of
the Shepherds was etched,
according to Vosmaer, between 1632 and 1640, according to
Middleton in 1652. The Star
of
the Kings is dated by Vosmaer
1
64 1,
but Middleton puts it twelve years later. When we are assured
by the Dutch authority that the date of The Blind Man seen from
behind is 1651 the English connoisseur throws us back no less than
twenty-one years, a little more than one-third of Rembrandt's whole
existence. There is, however, one page in Vosmaer's great work which
8 THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
deserves our unqualified approval. It is that in which he gives a list
of twenty-one plates for which he declines to fix any date whatever.
Writers for whom the fixing of dates is an absolutely over-mastering
passion may always safely assume that an etching by Rembrandt was
produced between 1607,
when the artist came into the world, and
1669, when he went out of it. No other plan is absolutely safe.
It might seem possible, at first sight, to assume that Rembrandt took
up the etching-needle in 1628, which is the first date we have, and
laid it down in 1661, as that is the last, but we have not the slightest
proof that he did not begin to etch when he was sixteen instead of
twenty-one, or that he did not continue the practice of the art after having,
from negligence or discouragement, entirely ceased to put dates upon his
productions. The matter may seem to be of slight importance in
comparison with the authenticity or the technical excellence of the plates
themselves, but it is really more important than, at first sight, it may
appear. If we knew exactly the order in which all the plates were
executed we might observe with the keenest interest the signs of mental
and technical progress. This is possible, in some degree, even with
the dated works that are accessible to us, although, as we have seen,
they are not very much more than half of the magnificent CEuvre.
My rule to refer in the biographical part to dated plates only is
a restriction on the side of safety, but there is another equally important,
and that is that a critic ought not to refer, except by way of caution,
to any plate of whose authenticity he is not perfectly satisfied. The
reader not yet familiar with the controversy concerning Rembrandt's
etchings may be briefly told in this place that a plate may be signed with
his name, and dated, without being necessarily his handiwork. The
etchings accumulated in collections under the name of Rembrandt may
be classed in these five categories.
1. Those plates of which the conception and execution are equally
and entirely those of Rembrandt himself. This category includes both
successful plates and failures which are rather numerous in proportion,
but the failure is in most instances purely technical and does not greatly
interfere with the mental qualities of the performance.
2. Plates of which the idea and design belong to Rembrandt but
of which the execution has been partially entrusted to assistants.
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
9
3.
Plates designed by Rembrandt but executed entirely by others.
4.
Plates of which the manual execution is more or less completely
due to Rembrandt, but in composing which he made use of borrowed
ideas.
5.
Plates with which Rembrandt had nothing whatever to do, either
mentally or manually.
Now of these five categories, I intend to confine myself, in the two
earlier parts of the present essay, entirely to the first. In my third
part, I shall enter upon the stony and thorny ground of controversy
and deal with the doubtful or contested plates, not that I have any
particular eagerness for controversial warfare, but because, in this case
it is impossible to keep out of it. Besides, no reasonable person could
fall into the illogical fallacy of interpreting an attack upon the
authenticity of more or less spurious Rembrandts as an attack upon
Rembrandt himself. The truth is that no kinder service can be rendered
to a great artist by the most faithful of his admirers than the detection
of those works that the cupidity of some, and the uncritical confidence of
others, have falsely attributed to him. Every work justly discarded
relieves his reputation of a burden, and when we reflect how ready
posterity always is to attribute works to celebrities whose names are
familiar to it, and how strongly persons who have them in their
possession, or desire to sell them, are biassed in favour of such
attribution, it seems inevitable that these burdens should be laid upon
the memory of the dead.
The absence of concord amongst authorities is shown in the following
little table:
Bartsch
(1797)
admits
375
plates.
Claussin
(1824)
365
Wilson
(1836) . . . .
Charles Blanc (1859-61)
Vosmaer (1868-77) . .
Middleton
(1878)
. . .
Dutuit
(1883) ....
369
353
353
3
2
9
3
6
3
Charles Blanc gives a list of twenty-nine rejected plates and makes
an addition of seven to the catalogue. Vosmaer accepts the number
given by Blanc as well as his system of order. Mr. Middleton gives
io THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
a list of eighteen rejected studies and sketches with thirty rejected
landscapes, and M. Dutuit adds to his catalogue a list of six etchings
"attributed to" Rembrandt, and two "falsely attributed." It is
unnecessary to go further into these questions at present. The reader
sees the necessity for great caution, but I may add, to reassure him,
that the great majority of the plates still attributed to Rembrandt
bear so visibly the impress of his hand and genius that they are accepted
without hesitation by every one who is familiar with his styles (for he
had several styles) and with the very different moods of his versatile
and generally quite original mind. He sometimes borrowed from others,
but not often, and though it is now evident that he accepted assistance
in the execution of certain plates that bear his name, we must still
remember that he was one of the most personally industrious of great
artists and one of those who have been most rarely dependent upon
auxiliaries.
It remains only to be added that references to plates will be
accompanied, at least once, by the numbers given respectively in the
catalogues of Bartsch and Middleton. That of Bartsch, though nearly
a hundred years old, is still a living work, in continual requisition, whilst
Mr. Middleton's catalogue has the advantages of being written in
English eighty years later, and of being easily accessible to Englishmen.
I would willingly have given references, in addition, to that of Charles
Blanc, as it is very clear and readable, and *was charmingly illustrated
by Flameng, but it seemed that a string of three references to every
plate was likely to be confusing, especially as the names of the
Frenchman and the German begin with the same letter.
II
The reputation of Rembrandt has undergone the most extreme
vicissitudes. In his own life-time he rose from obscurity to a local
and afterwards national celebrity, but sank down again, several years
before his death, into the trying position of a neglected and unfashionable
artist. "Often," says Vosmaer, "have I felt indignant at the small
degree of enthusiasm manifested by his contemporaries." Vondel either
really cared nothing for Rembrandt or affected complete indifference.
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT n
Another contemporary poet said that as Rembrandt found he could
not equal Titian, Vandyke or Michael Angelo, he preferred to wander
from the right path and become the first heretic in art rather than
strengthen himself by following the most experienced. Houbraken
speaks of the art of Rembrandt in the past tense, saying that it had
(at one time) the success of novelty, it was a fashion, and artists had
been obliged to imitate him in order to sell, even when their own
manner of painting was far superior. Lairesse condemned Rembrandt
and Lievens together, but, with a distant approach to generosity, went
so far as to admit that Rembrandt's way of painting was
"
not absolutely
bad." Some time after the artist's death came a reaction in his favour
showing itself decidedly in the beginning of the eighteenth century by
an extended appreciation in foreign countries. Still, throughout the
eighteenth century, criticism was too subservient to classical authority
to recognise Rembrandt with any complete cordiality, and if he was
praised for some qualities he was condemned, with at least equal
frankness, for the defects that accompanied them. Even so late in the
century as the time of Barry, who began his Academy lectures in
1784,
it was possible for him to speak of Rembrandt's
"
laborious, ignorant
diligence," in rendering the
"
multiplied wrinkles and trifling peculiarities
of the skin." He admitted the ability of Rembrandt in colouring and
chiaroscuro but hated his most masterly style, condemning the "obtrusive,
licentious, slovenly conduct of his pencil
"
as
"
not less disgusting than
it is useless." Opie spoke of him as
"
foremost of those who in the
opinion of some critics cut the knot instead of untying it, and
burglariously entered the Temple of Fame by the window." Reynolds
compared Poussin with Rembrandt as to their composition and manage-
ment of light and shadow, adding that they
"
ran into contrary extremes
and that it is difficult to determine which is the most reprehensible, both
being equally distant from the demands of nature and the purposes of
art." He admits that the pictures of Rembrandt may
"
not come amiss
when mixed with the performances of artists of a more regular manner."
Reynolds was just however (without being in the least enthusiastic)
about both drawing and colour in The Anatomical Lesson. Fuseli
appreciated Rembrandt better, classing him as a genius of the first
rank
"
in whatever relates not to form." Again, Fuseli has an intelligent
12 THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
onslaught upon the topographic delineation of landscape and says that
the landscape of Rembrandt
"
spurns all relation with this kind of
map-work." He describes Rembrandt's figures as
"
uniform abstracts
of lumpy or meagre deformity," but admits that,
"
form only excepted,
he possessed every power that constitutes genius in art."
All these academical opinions, including the favourable one of
Constable on Rembrandt's chiaroscuro picture of the Mill, refer to the
master's work in painting, not to his etchings. One of the first English
artists who took any special interest in the etchings was the elder Leslie,
and he once wrote a short sentence of five lines about the services of
photography in reproducing
"
these inestimable works." Mr. Ruskin
once gave a foot-note, also of five lines, to Rembrandt's etchings, that
appreciated the synthetic quality of the landscapes, and in the text of
"
Modern Painters," there are references to two plates, The Presentation
in the Temple (B. 50.
M.
243)
and The Shell (B.
159.
M. 290). I
do not remember any other reference to the etchings in Mr. Ruskin's
works except some depreciatory remarks upon their technique in a letter
on the etchings of Mr. Ernest George.
In most of these instances of criticism, what strikes us is the remark-
able coolness of the critics, their absence of anything approaching to
enthusiasm. Those who appreciate in some degree the qualities of the
master are not carried away by them, they have not the tone of critics
speaking about an artist who has delighted them and whose defects they
may be aware of but are willing to overlook
;
they have the tone of men
who, when they praise, do it from a wish to avoid injustice. Fuseli is
hearty in praise and blame, Leslie and Constable praise heartily as far as
they go, but are extremely laconical. The brevity of Mr. Ruskin is still
more striking in a difFusely eloquent writersix lines for the religious
subjects, five for the landscapes, two for a study of still life
!
The truth appears to be that the present splendour of Rembrandt's
fame is more recent than we can easily realise. It has been due to several
causes, distinct in themselves, but all operating together. The first is the
complete extinction of classicism as an exclusive authority though it has
happily survived, and with improved culture, as a taste. The second lies
in the greater facilities for travelling which have enabled critics to see
more of Rembrandt's whole performance and know him better, and the
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRJNDT
13
third is in the invention of certain processes of engraving in which
photography does the drawing, though not the biting, and so far ensures
a considerable degree of fidelity, as well as cheapness in the most recent
reproductions. But these causes, potent as they are, would probably have
had a less effect on Rembrandt's fame if they had not been accompanied,
in all civilised countries, by a revival of the art of etching. The opinion
amongst etchers which enthrones Rembrandt as the king of their craft is
the most recent instance of perfect unanimity amongst people of all
nationalities. As we all say that Phidias was the greatest sculptor,
Homer the greatest epic poet, and Shakespeare the greatest dramatist, so
are we all agreed upon the world-wide supremacy of Rembrandt. And
the higher our appreciation of etching as essentially an artist's art the more
exalted becomes the position of its greatest practitioner. I am told that, of
late years, there has been some decline in the appreciation of etching.
Perhaps it is no longer fashionable to pretend to be enchanted by its
masterpieces, but these changes of surface-fashion have little to do with
culture. The plain truth is that the etched work of Rembrandt is now
intelligible to thousands, whereas in the beginning of the present century
it was almost like an unknown tongue, or characters understood by few.
Another recent piece of good fortune for Rembrandt is that he has
fallen into the hands of a competent biographer, Vosmaer, a writer
entirely free from that credulity of mediocrity which makes it ever ready
to accept the common calumnies against genius. The idlest and most
ridiculous stories about Rembrandt had become traditional. Vosmaer
showed that they had not, and that they could not have, any other
foundation than the inventive spite of a great man's usual detractors. He
showed us Rembrandt as he lived, a man of immense industry and the
simplest tastes (with the one exception of a passion for works of art), a
man whose force of character and courage in adversity immediately
suggest to English readers the name of one great in another art who died
like Rembrandt in harness and at Rembrandt's years, the artist who died
at Abbotsford.
In his own lines of work there is no one in all history to be compared
with Rembrandt; in artistic influence he has one equal, entirely unlike
himself, and that is Raphael. It was not by accident that medallions of
these two were put together on the cover of the Portfolio. They are
i
4
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
the two most influential graphic artists of all time. Comte defined art as
consisting in the three processes of observation, imitation, and idealisation.
The three are common to both artists but in Rembrandt observation
predominates, in Raphael idealisation. As for imitation they are alike in
possessing the power of it and in using it more or less, but always
subordinately to the artistic purpose. Raphael is called quite accurately
in a certain sense,
"
the divine
"
;
"
the human
"
is an epithet that might,
with equal justice, be applied to Rembrandt.
Ill
The date of the first etchings that have any date at all is the year
1628, when the artist was twenty-one years old. There are two
signed etchings for that year. One of them, An Old Woman s
Head, full face, seen only to the Chin (B.
352.
M.
6.),
is very simply
etched, though drawn with easy skill, especially visible in the reserves of
half-light in the shaded parts. It is already the work of an artist, but
has no special distinction. The other little plate, Bust
of
an Old Woman,
lightly etched (B.
354.
M.
5),
is much more than that; it is the work,
already, of a great and most accomplished master. It was never
afterwards surpassed, either in the penetrating observation of nature, or
in delicate sufficiency of execution, by any subsequent work of Rembrandt
himself, and it is almost impossible to believe that even so strong a
natural genius as his could produce work of such rare excellence without
years of previous practice, not only in drawing, but in actual work
with the etching needle. He probably began to etch in his minority,
making attempts that did not seem to him worth dating, then he did
these things, and put not only his signature, but the year. However
this may be, the fact is certain that at the age of twenty-one
he had already mastered one of his several styles. I do not wish to
exaggerate the matter, I do not believe that at twenty-one he could have
got through such a task as the portrait of the Burgomaster Six, but he
had already one of the strings to his bow.
At the date of these plates Rembrandt was living at his father's house
in Leyden. He had been destined to a learned profession, but had not
taken well to classical studies, and instead of proceeding with them had
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
15
followed art in Van Swanenburch's studio for three years, which probably-
ended about 1620. After that he had been apprenticed to Pieter
Lastman and stayed with him, according to Orlers, six months. It is
believed that he returned to his father's house about 1623,
and stayed
there till 1630. At the date of the etchings that occupy us he had
already painted a picture which is known and now at Stuttgart, and he
had also taken his first pupil, Gerard Dow. Everything is rather early,
rather precocious, with Rembrandt. He got up early in the morning
of life, and set to work at a time when others are dreaming about what
they intend to do. It has been assumed that the little etchings of
1628 were portraits of Rembrandt's mother, and they are so entered in
Blanc's catalogue, but there is no evidence in favour of such an idea.
According to Vosmaer the mother was about thirty-five years old at
the date of Rembrandt's birth, consequently she would be about fifty-six
when he came of age, but the old lady in the etching looks past seventy.
1
There is just one etching for
1629, and that is an excellent proof of
the tendency to vary his styles and make experiments, which was in
Rembrandt's nature, and remained with him through life. The title of
it in Mr. Middleton's catalogue is Rembrandt, a Bust; supposed to be
engraved on Pewter (B.
336.
M.
7.).
It is a rough sketch in a bold
and decided manner, without any attempt at delicacy of tone or even of
line, but immense vivacity of handling, and the peculiarity of it is
that some of the shading is done with a double point, as if two points
had been tied together, which they probably were. Many etchers have
tried that experiment for greater speed in shading, but it does not really
advance matters very much, and Rembrandt never afterwards recurred
to it.
The year 1630 is remarkable for a series of small plates, in which
the artist amused himself in studying expression by assuming it in his
own features. The practice may easily be represented as ridiculous, and
has, no doubt, a ludicrous aspect, as it is difficult to think quite seriously
of a grown man making faces, as children do, before a glass. It has been
1
Many women after seventy are better preserved than Rembrandt's old lady
;
Queen
Victoria is an instance, and in quiet middle-class life good preservation is by no means
rare. This Dutchwoman, tranquil and fairly well off, might very well be eighty. \
have known a younger-looking lady at ninety-three.
i6 THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
done occasionally by modern actors for instantaneous photography, and
with this result, that when the costume is changed at the same time as
the expression the original human being becomes unrecognisable. Rem-
brandt himself is not always immediately recognised in these etchings,
but we get accustomed to the changes in his physiognomy, in his head-
gear, and in the length of his hair. We have him
"
with an open
mouth" (B. 13. M.
22.);
"with an air of grimace" (B. 10. M.
23.);
"with haggard eyes" (B. 320. M.
24.);
and "laughing" (B. 316.
M.
25.).
These little plates, and others, probably of the same date, or
very near it, are executed with a fine point, and are distinguished by an
extreme manual facility. The evident speed of their execution does not,
however, prevent the artist from noticing the most minute truths of form
and of light and shade, as, for example, in the learnedly reserved reflec
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Rembrandt. Full Face, Laughing.
B. 316. M. 25.
Rembrandt -with an Air
of
Grimace.
B. 10. M. 23.
Rembrandt ivith Haggard Eyes.
B. 320. M. 24.
tions in the shading of Rembrandt with an open Mouth (B. 13. M. 22.).
There may be haste in such work as this, but there is no carelessness, and
as for vitality it is superabundant, both in the subjects and the execution.
In the same year,
1630, Rembrandt made two serious etchings of
himself, one
"
with curly hair rising into a tuft over the right eye
"
(B.
27. M.
26.) the other "with fur cap and light dress" (B. 24. M. 27.).
Both these plates are very lightly sketched in the manner that the French
call "croquis." The one with the fur cap is a pleasant and probably
very truthful likeness of the artist at the age of twenty-three, without
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT i7
any flattery as to form, but having the air of a young man at the
same time very intelligent and perfectly satisfied with himself. The
other gives a fine idea of Rembrandt's abundant head of hair which
resembles as to quantity the wigs of the eighteenth century. It may
be that he sometimes added in his paintings and etchings to the
liberal gifts of nature, as in portraits of the same year the hair is at
one time prodigious and at another ordinary. For example, in
Rembrandt with Haggard Eyes, there is not enough of it to attract
attention.
Rembrandt now began his long series of etchings of scriptural
subjects. One, dated 1630,
is a Jesus Disputing with the Doctors
(B. 66. M.
177.),
a small plate, delicately etched, but very grandly
conceived, and another of the same year is The Presentation with the
Angel (B. 51. M.
178.),
called so because an angel with wings appears
over the left shoulder of Anna the prophetess. Like the
Jesus
Disputing, this plate is of small dimen-
sions and slight rather than powerful
execution.
It seems highly probable that Rem-
brandt began to etch beggars very early
in life, as the style that he adopted
for that class of subject was quite fully
developed in
1630, and there are several
etchings of that year, dated, which are not
inferior in execution to the numerous
beggar subjects of later years. There
are also some good portrait studies,
for example, An Old Man with a Large
Beard, the Shoulders lower than the Ears
(B.
309,
M.
31),
which is one of
Rembrandt's finest studies of old age.
There is the Projile
of
a Bald Man (B. 292. M.
39.)
and the
Portrait
of
a Man with a broad-brimmed Hat and a
Ruff
which is
unquestionably one of the most entirely satisfactory of Rembrandt's
simpler little plates (B. 311. M.
28.).
I have dwelt in some detail on these plates because they have a
c
Tiuo Beggars, a Man and a Woman
Conversing. B. 164. M.
37.
i8 THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
special interest as showing what a good start Rembrandt made in
etching, and how early in life. We have now to remember that at
the age of twenty-one he executed the little plate of the old lady,
which has never been surpassed in its own way, and that at twenty-three
he had tried his hand, with rare success, on a variety of subjects and
in three or four different styles. He was already in the peculiar
situation of an artist who has left himself no room for improvement
except in attempting art of another kind, and in overcoming new,
though possibly not greater difficulties.
With the exception of the six months spent in the studio of Pieter
Lastman, Rembrandt had hitherto remained entirely with his parents
at Leyden, as his three years' pupilage with Swanenburch, then a
Leyden artist, does not imply any change of residence. Rembrandt's
youth had been free from every care but that of his own progress
in art. His parents were in easy circumstances in the burgher class
View
of
Amsterdam. B. 210. M. 30^..
and if he had not received a full classical education it was only because
he had not taken to it. Born for the graphic arts, he had taken to
painting and etching with the utmost interest and immediate success.
This justified him in establishing himself as an artist with a house
and studio of his own, and he selected Amsterdam rather than Leyden
as a place of residence, though the choice involved a separation from
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
19
his father, who died about two years later, from his mother, who
lived on for twenty years, and from his four brothers and two sisters
who were all living at that time. Settled in Amsterdam in
1630,
Rembrandt resumed his etching. The plates dated 1631 include
twenty-seven portraits and studies, one
"
fancy composition," if a
single figure deserves the title, but no religious subject. This year
the portraits include five of himself, of which the most perfect,
technically, is Rembrandt with Round Fur Cap, full face (B. 16.
M.
45.)
but that is in the earlier style. The desire for new con-
quests is shown in the larger Rembrandt with Broad Hat and
Embroidered Mantle (B.
7.
M.
52.)
in which the etcher has laboriously
aimed at high finish and rich textures without, however, abandoning
his former delicate treatment of light passages as in the collar and
the lighted side of the face and hair. It may be noted as a sign of
increasing prosperity and self-respect that the young painter, instead
of pulling faces in the glass, now poses before it with the air and
costume of a well-bred, gentleman. Another very fine portrait of this
time is that of the Man with a Short Beard and Embroidered Cloak
(B. 263. M.
77.),
full of clear and decided drawing without any over-
finish. The student may observe how completely explanatory, with few
lines, is the treatment of the costume. Rembrandt still retains his
former interest in old age and proves it by a wonderfully beautiful
Bust
of
an Old Man with a Long Beard (B. 260. M. 62.). The
wrinkled forehead would no doubt have been accepted by Barry as a
proof of Rembrandt's
"
ignorant diligence
"
in copying
"
the multiplied
wrinkles and trifling peculiarities of the skin." This is one of the most
perfect of Rembrandt's lighter and more delicate etchings, and there is
another charming little sketch plate of an old bearded man with the
date of 1631 (B.
315.
M.
63.).
In this year Rembrandt went on with
his series of beggars, but without any change of style, and etched in the
same light manner a clever plate of very small dimensions known as
The Little Polander (B. 142. M.
79.).
One of the most important
works of the year was the portrait of Rembrandt's Mother, her Hand
resting upon her Breast (B.
348.
M.
55.).
This etching belongs to
the same class of serious, highly finished, and dignified works as the
portrait of the artist himself with the Broad Hat and Embroidered
c 2
20 THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
Mantle. It was a new style with Rembrandt then and these works
have an air which implies that he took a certain pride in it. Certainly
this portrait of his mother is one of the most beautiful etchings he ever
produced. The contrasts of delicacy and strength of line in flesh and
costume are extreme but never offensive. They occur always in the
right place and however easy the workmanship there is no carelessness.
For the year 1632 there is nothing dated, in the way of studies and
portraits, except a vastly broad figure of a Persian
"
swell ' (there is
no other word for him) who goes swaggering along with cloak, and
fringes, and medal, and cane, and plume ! It is a charming example
of the serio-comical, admirably etched in a light incisive way (B. 152.
M.
91.).
The same year is marked by a return to religious subjects in
a St. Jerome, praying passionately, St. Jerome Kneeling, an Arched
Print (B. 101. M. 183.). Notwithstanding the difference of subject,
St. Jerome is etched in the same light and clever manner as the
distinguished Persian. This, too, is the year of The Rat Killer (B. 121.
M. 261.), one of Rembrandt's characteristic plates of popular subjects
reminding us in that respect of Ostade, and also in the complete absence
of local colour. The execution is like that of some of the beggar series
but not so lively as the best of them. It is a complete Dutch picture
as to composition, though the light-and-shade is little more than
indicated.
I have never admired the portrait of
1633,
Rembrandt with a Scarf
round his Neck (B.
17,
M.
99).
The face is almost entirely in shade,
except a little sunshine on the left cheek, and as the shading is heavy,
coarse, and over-bitten, it looks as if the original had had his face
blackened.
It is most difficult to give a satisfactory account of Rembrandt's
etched work for the year
1633,
as it so happens that some of the most
important parts of what is attributed to him for that year are subjects
of doubt and discussion, and must therefore be reserved for later con-
sideration. There is no evidence that Rembrandt made any progress as
an etcher in that year. What was intended to be a very important plate,
a great Descent from the Cross, was entirely ruined in the biting, ruined
past redemption, so that after two or three trial proofs the plate was
abandoned. A second plate of the same composition appears to have been
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT 21
An Old Woman etched no
loiver than the Chin.
B. 351. M. 101.
etched by another hand. We know from the number of pictures signed
by Rembrandt at this time or soon after that he was most industriously
occupied with painting, and he now began, probably for commercial
reasons, to make compositions for large plates full of tiresome work and
for which he would naturally be tempted to employ assistants. The
experience of all etchers has shown that the big commercial plate is an
artistic error, whatever may be its immediate pecuniary advantages.
There is, however, a very little plate, An Old Woman etched no lower than
the Chin (B.
351,
M. 101),
which is a return,
without any visible improvement, to the artist's
simplest and most elementary style of five years
before.
The production of large commercial plates, as
well as the painting of many pictures about this
time, may have been connected with ideas of mar-
riage in obedience to the Shakespearian rule,
"
Put
money in thy purse." In June 1634
Rembrandt
married Saskia van Ulenburgh at Bilt in Friesland.
She was a young lady of good family, and although
Rembrandt was not in the least worldly or what is called a
"
society
man," still, as his marriage improved his social position, he may have
been tempted to some display about this time. It was a very brilliant
marriage for a young artist. Vosmaer tells us that Saskia gave Rem-
brandt admission
"
into a distinguished family, whose members illustrated
the magistrature, science, literature, and the arts." She also brought
Rembrandt a good fortune, and there is evidence that the marriage was a
happy one.
There are uncertainties and disappointments in etching even for the
most experienced masters, and one of the worst plates that Rembrandt ever
made, if, indeed, he did entirely execute it with his own hand, is the
portrait of Jan Sylvius (B. 266. M. no.), that of
1634,
which is not
to be confounded with the fine later portrait of Sylvius preaching,
executed four years later. The first Sylvius does not show Rembrandt's
usual skill in drawing (look at the right nostril and the wooden hands)
whilst the shading is heavy and of poor quality, being without any
effectual varieties of tone, texture, and handling. Admiration of bad
22 THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
work like this, whether sincere or feigned, only diminishes the value
of that which is rightly given to good examples of the art. It is
interesting to observe that in the same year
(1634)
Rembrandt recurred
to the very simplest and most elementary (but often most satisfac-
tory) kind of etching, clear line and plain shading, in some studies of
beggars which are admirable examples of such work, to be recommended
to the attention of all practical beginners.
The year
1634
is that of the very celebrated etching called The Great
Jewish Bride (B.
340.
M. 108.). This title has nothing to do with the
bigness of the bride herself; it is merely used to distinguish the plate
from a smaller one of another person. M. Charles Blanc made it out to
his own satisfaction that this is really a portrait of Saskia, Rembrandt's
wife, his strongest argument being that the plate was executed in the year
of his marriage. The other argument, based on likeness to known
portraits of Saskia, is untenable. The two women are not of the same
feminine type. The Saskia who is in the plate called Rembrandt and his
Wife (B. 19. M. 128.) is a bright-looking, intelligent woman, and so is
the lady, evidently the same person, in Rembrandt's Wife and Five other
Heads (B.
365.
M. 129.). The Jewish Bride, on the other hand, has
certainly less than the usual intelligence of her race. She is a fine
woman, physically, and she has magnificent hair, but she is only a fine
woman and Saskia is much more. Besides, the Jewish lady looks as if
she could be bad-tempered, which Saskia does not. The Jewess has a
low forehead, a large ugly mouth with protruding lower lip, and a very
dark complexion
;
Saskia's forehead is high, her mouth small and pretty,
and her complexion fair. M. Charles Blanc believed that the uppermost
of the Three Heads
of
Women (B.
367.
M.
115.)
had at least been
suggested by Saskia. This seems very probable, the face is pleasant and
intelligent.
The Great Jewish Bride, in its finished state, is an attempt at
complete tonality. It is more successful in that respect than the first
portrait of Sylvius, but I may be excused for preferring the costume
portrait which Mr. Middleton calls Portrait, Unknown,
of
a Man with a
Sabre (B. 23. M. III.), but which Mr. Haden and others have believed
to be Rembrandt himself. M. Charles Blanc was disposed to abandon this
idea, as there is not much likeness to other self-portraits of the master
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
23
and there is a wart on this face that does not occur in the others. Blanc
saw a likeness to the Duke of Gueldres, but the search of an original is
unnecessary, as the etching is most probably a fancy piece, only bearing
some resemblance to Rembrandt himself, without pretending to be a
likeness. It is very cleverly executed. The shade on the face is too
black, which may probably be accounted for by the original intention
Three Heads
of
Women. B.
367. M. 115.
to use the copper as an ornamental plate on a box rather than for
printing. There was, however, in Rembrandt's work at this time a
decided tendency to over-shading, the consequence of those experiments
in full tonality which all etchers seem to be, at one time in their lives,
tempted to make. A charming plate of this year, A Young Woman
reading (B.
345,
M.
109.),
is injured by too great darkness and heaviness
in the shading of the face. In the same year,
1634,
we find two small
plates of religious subjects, The Samaritan Woman
"
Solinga, scura, cupa, senza speme,
La notte quando Lilla m'abbandona :
Pei cuori che si batton insieme
Ogni notte, senza dirla, sara buona."
Three Peasants Travelling. B. 131. M.
153.
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
65
nature without grossness and therefore keeps habitually away from it
as if warned by a consciousness of deficiency. There are, indeed, two
deficiencies in Rembrandt with regard to this, his lack of ideality and the
insufficiency of his classical culture.
It might be argued that Rembrandt drew the body with the same
veracity as the hands and face, and that our criticism betrays a want
of consistency in ourselves, since we approve of truth in the representation
of the features and object to it in the trunk or limbs. Certainly
Rembrandt never palliated plainness, he described even the ugliness
of his own nose (B. 4. M.
42.),
but whenever the human face is in
question there may always be a ready and ample compensation for the
lack of beauty in the presence of intellect and character, or, if these
are wanting, in pathos. It is a sign of gentle feeling in a young man
to take a respectful interest in age. Rem-
brandt began early in life to write on
copper his own immortal treatise de
Senectute. His strength lay in his respect
for the wisdom of maturity and the dignity
of declining years. His best portraits
always represent either grave and learned
men like Ephraim Bonus and Cornelius
Sylvius, or old men like Jacob Haring
(B.
274.
M.
168.), one of his finest works.
No author ever described more gently than
Rembrandt has done in that portrait the
slow approaches of senility. Some of
the most interesting heads of old men
are without names, and all we know is that they once existed. Rembrandt
seems to have taken an interest in them for the most various reasons.
Their hair and beards, if luxuriant, were delightful to etch, but baldness
interested the artist also, and we find several studies of bald men, like this
one called a Profile
of
a Bald Man with a Jewelled Chain (B.
292.
M.
39.).
1
He amused himself by noting the various stages and degrees
1
It is the first state that shows the chain of the order, the second state is altered,
and the third shows heavy additional work, which M. Dutuit supposes to have been
added by another hand.
Profile of
a Bald Man ivitli a
Jewelled Chain, B. 292. M.
39.
66 THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
of baldness, for example, it is incipient in the little etching called by
M. Dutuit Tele a demi chauve
1
(B. 296. M.
95.)*
whilst it is lamentably-
complete in another little etching, Bust
of
a Bald Man, leaning forward
to the Right with his Mouth open (B. 298. M.
56.).
We know from
many pictures and etchings that Rembrandt fully appreciated a fine beard,
yet he could turn aside to note the poverty of a thin stubbly one as well
as cranial nudity in An Old Man with a Short Straight Beard; a Profile
to the Right (B. 306. M. 120.), reproduced on
p.
59.
Amongst all Rembrandt's numerous studies of old age, I know of
none more observantly truthful than the delightful little etching of
An Old Woman Sleeping (B.
350.
M. 1
16.).
This seems to have been long a popular
plate, as it has been often copied, once
by Andrew Geddes. I do not know any
work by the master that contains so much
of his human sympathy and such abundant
evidence of observation on so small a scale.
The old lady, comfortably as well as pic-
turesquely clothed, has been reading her
Bible and has been surprised by a sudden
need of sleep, her head resting on one
hand, the spectacles, no longer wanted, on
the other. As a study, the little etching
could not have been carried further. It re-
minds me of Leslie's opinion that
"
the pre-
valent tone of Rembrandt's mind, as shown in his art, is serenity. Where
the subject allows him, his natural disposition seems always tranquil,
and though serious, yet the very reverse of gloomy. He is the painter
of repose, as Rubens is the painter of action." Rembrandt sometimes
attempted violent action, as in the three rapidly executed sketch plates
of lion hunts,
2
and it seemed to be a usual coincidence in his sketching
An Old Woman Sleeping. B.
350.
M. 1 16.
1
I give a French title for once, as it is much more accurate than Mr. Middleton's,
"Head of a Bald Old Man, inclined to the Left." The man is not old, his hair is still
dark, and he is scarcely bald, as it is only thinning at the top.
2
The large one (B. 114. M. 272.) has been already mentioned. The two smaller
ones are etched in the same violently vigorous style for composition and action only, form
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
67
that when the subject was connected with energetic action the handling
was bold, quick, and decided, concerning itself as little about a multitude
of minor truths as a war-horse thinks of the field-mice beneath its feet.
The reader may accept A Battle Piece (B. 117. M.
275.)
as an expression
of a temper which sometimes, but rarely, manifested itself in the works
of Rembrandt. What he felt to be most in harmony with his own
nature was quiet thought or peaceful and deliberate occupation. I
A Battle Piece. B. 117. M.
275.
should say, for instance, that the beautiful, lightly sketched Old Man
resting his Hands upon a Book (B.
147.
M.
156.)
well represents the
quiet thought, whilst the Student in his Chamber (B. 148. M. 276.)
and
St Jerome; in Rembrandt
1
s dark manner (B. 105. M.
214.)
represent the
solitary work or study which the artist, though not himself a bookish
man, could still appreciate and understand.
being of necessity sacrificed, as the shapes of letters are in the swiftest writing (B. 115.
M.
273.)
(B. 116. M
274.).
F 2
68 THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
III
Some artists have an aristocratic turn by nature, as Rubens, Vandyke,
Reynolds; others are naturally plebeian like Ostade, as in literature we
have our genteel novelists who always introduce us to gentlefolks, and
our plebeian or middle-class novelists who pride themselves on an intimate
knowledge of the people. If it were asked to which category Rem-
brandt belonged, the right answer would be that he was too great
to be either enviously hostile to the wealthy or contemptuous towards
the poor. One of the imputations currently received against him was a
taste for low society; the class he habitually lived in was that which
follows the learned or the artistic professions ; most of his friends were
doctors, lawyers, clergymen, or painters and etchers like himself. He
was not a tuft-hunter; he did not run after great folks. Having work
enough in his art he sought only recreation in society, and expressed his
taste in words that have become immortal.
"
Als ik mijn geest
uitspanninge wil geven, dan is het niet eer die ik zoek, maar vrijheid."
"
When I wish to give rest to my mind, it is not honours that I seek,
but liberty." A life divided between hard work and perfect ease left no
room for that mysterious art of social advancement which has been for
many a painter the secret of success.
IV
If Rembrandt was neither aristocratic nor democratic, ought we to
say that he was religious ? No one can deny that he was a most suc-
cessful illustrator of the Old and New Testaments, not to mention the
Apocrypha. Here he is a strong competitor with Raphael and Michael
Angelo, though on principles the opposite of theirs. Whilst they
endeavoured to idealise prophets and apostles, and to rise even to the
representation of Divinity, Rembrandt had a clear vision of all religious
personages as human beings. One of his compositions is called the
"
Ecce Homo." In a certain sense the title is applicable to them all.
Even God the Father, in Abraham entertaining the Angels, is represented
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
69
as an amiable human friend who appreciates a glass of wine. Christ, in
the Hundred Guilder and many another print, is the Son of Man who
sympathises with suffering in others or endures it patiently himself.
When Christ is preaching, as in the etching known as La Tombe (B.
67.
M.
229.),
Rembrandt no more despises the humble listeners than did
-._ QnufcoLi)/,
Christ's Body carried to the Tomb. B. 84. M. zij.
the Teacher who addressed them. When the voice is silenced, a pathetic
little group bears the body, tortured no longer, to its quiet resting-place.
This scene is represented in a little etching, Christ's Body carried to the
Tomb (B.
84. M.
217.),
in which the simple-hearted, affectionate followers
are unconscious that theirs is the grandest funeral procession of all time.
70
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
In judging Rembrandt as a etcher of landscape we ought to bear in
mind two considerations, first, that landscape was quite a secondary
pursuit for him ; and, next, that he was situated in a country where the
grander manifestations of natural glory in landscape are unknown. It is
supposed that he may have visited some hilly, but not mountainous,
district in Germany, and it has been affirmed, on very insufficient evidence,
that he knew the neighbourhood of Hull. However this may be,
Rembrandt had not a tithe of the landscape experience of Titian, nor a
hundredth part of the opportunities of Turner. He knew nothing of
Scotland, France, Switzerland, or Italy. He was deprived of at least
half the materials accessible to him by his complete indifference to, and
corresponding ignorance of, the sea. Neither had he Claude's exquisite
sense of the richness of inland landscape. Add to this the peculiar limita-
tions of the art of etching which are not favourable to those delicate distinc-
tions of tone on which all the most impressive effects of distant landscape
must depend. The consequences are, first, confinement to simple and
homely subjects, and, secondly, great simplicity in the treatment of those
subjects.
And yet, notwithstanding these limitations, we all look upon
Rembrandt as a master, even of landscape. The reason for this may be
expressed in a single phrase, his powerful expression of character. If he
does not attempt to imitate the exact forms of a scene, or the tones of an
effect, he shows you the nature of the place at the first glance and makes
you feel as if you were there. No delineation of landscape was ever more
penetrating or more comprehensive. Take, for instance, the Landscape
with a Ruined Tower and a Clear Foreground (B. 223. M.
317.)
and see
how everything about the place is either explained or suggested. We
have the rural village with its old church, and houses, and haystacks, and
its gloomy wood, and the road that passes by. At the same time we are
made to feel that it is in the open country, and an effect of stormy
weather is suggested in dark distance and threatening sky, without any
attempt at imitation. Nothing more, in the way of impression, could be
communicated without colour. Essentially the same landscape in
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
71
principle is the one called by Mr. Middleton An Arched Landscape with
a Flock
of
Sheep (B. 224. M.
319).
x
Here, too, we have an open foreground, the chief interest of the
subject, as before, being in a mass of trees and a hay barn that occupy the
middle distance, leaving an outlet to the left. I recommend the student
to familiarise himself with the workmanship of this plate, because so many
small landscape etchings have been attributed to Rembrandt that it is well
to have in the memory a good type of his landscape executed on a small
scale. For the same reason I mention A Village with a Square Tower
;
an Arched Plate (B. 218. M.
321.) and the Landscape with an Obelisk
(B. 227. M.
324).
There is also a small landscape that may be easily
overlooked, but which has its own importance, An Orchard with a Barn
(B. 230. M.
316.)
These plates, notwithstanding their limited dimen-
sions, are executed in as strong and simple a style as, for example, the
Landscape with a Ruined Tower and a Clear Foreground (B. 223. M.
317.),
whereas many little plates attributed to Rembrandt are weak and rather
pretty, or not pretty at all but still weak, both in conception and in
style.
On looking back over the landscapes I observe the following chief
characteristics. First, a strong sense of the picturesque in foreground
material as in the Village with a River and a Sailing Vessel (B. 228.
M.
314.),
next, in several plates, a disposition to throw the interest into
the middle distance and sacrifice the foreground (see Landscape with
Ruined Tower, &V.); lastly, a lively sense of the charm of a remote
distance, as in the lovely outlook to the left in A Large Landscape with
a Dutch Hay Barn (B. 225. M.
306.)
and other instances. It is
surprising that after the magnificent note of transient effect in The Three
Trees, where the grandeur and motion of a sky are perfectly suggested,
Rembrandt should not have attempted to etch other skies, but that
remains alone with the single exception of the threatening weather in the
sublime plate of The Ruined Tower. The inference is that Rembrandt
was by no means indifferent to the impressiveness of skies in nature, but
1
The French critics entitle the same plate La Grange a Foin or La Grange a Foin et
le Troupeau ; Mr. Middleton's title seems to attract too much attention to the sheep
which do not strike the eye at the first glance. His word "arched" helps to distinguish
the plate well.
72
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
was dissatisfied with their rudely linear interpretation in etching, as he
practised the art. His knowledge of water appears to have been
extremely limited, a mere nothing in comparison with that attained by
modern landscape-painters. Rembrandt sometimes indicated the presence
of water, but that was all ; he never attempted to etch a wave, his study
of reflections was rudimentary, the best instance being A Cottage with
White Pales (B. 232. M. 308,).
He was strongest in picturesque
buildings and next to that in trees, though his merit as an etcher of trees
lies principally in his fine sense of mass, for he does not seem to have had
any extensive knowledge of species. Altogether, Rembrandt was a
landscape etcher of great power, because he was such a forcible artist
before he approached landscape, but, though he proved this in a few
superb plates, his acquaintance with nature was most limited. He has,
however, exercised a great technical influence on landscape etching and
through it on modern pen-drawing and landscape illustration generally.
Besides, it would be unfair to judge of Rembrandt's studies in landscape
from his work on copper alone, as there exist many sketches by him in
other materials.
VI
Rembrandt took but little interest in animals, which occur very
rarely in his etchings, and the most finished of these representations,
The Little Dog Sleeping (B. 158. M.
267.),
is
probably by another hand. There is another
Sketch
of
a Dog (B.
371.
M. 266.) in the
corner of a plate of which the rest was left
vacant; it is good, and evidently authentic.
For the heraldic lion in St. Jerome Sitting at
the Foot
of
a Tree (B. 100. M.
190.)
I do not
hold Rembrandt responsible, nor for the ass in
The Flight into Egypt; a Small Spright Print
Sketch
of a Dog. B. 371. M. 266.
T x
1
(B.
52. M. 184.). He is, however, answer-
able for the wild beasts in the large and lesser
Lion Hunts, which have energetic motion but are poor in size and shape
(compare these wild-cats with the bronzes of Barye), and for the ass in
oo
CO
ss
J?
^
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
75
The Flight into Egypt; the Holy Family crossing a Rill (B.
55.
M.
240.),
which has the genuine asinine character and action.
1
This does not
amount to evidence that Rembrandt had the love of domesticated
animals that distinguished Paul Potter. Where, in the etchings, are
his sheep ? Where are his cattle or farm-horses, either in harness or at
liberty in the fields ? For an artist with Rembrandt's power of drawing,
his attention to animal life seems strangely rare and languid in its
interest, as it is impossible that he can have been turned aside from
it by any consciousness of technical inability.
VII
The artistic personality we have been studying is one of great range
and mighty energy, yet far from being universal. It is marked by a
strong preference of maturity to youth and by an unfailing interest in
age. Full of the most intense and pathetic human sympathy, even its
religion is a
"
religion of humanity." It is indifferent to the division of
mankind into patrician and plebeian classes, but not indifferent to the
signs of culture and of thought. Its sense of beauty is picturesque
rather than plastic, and attaches itself to effect rather than to form. It
strongly prefers costume to nudity. It seeks refreshment and consolation
in homely landscape, yet has some appreciation of grander and more
romantic scenery. It pays a slight occasional attention to animals.
With remarkable and rare powers of memory, invention, and manual
execution, it is without any sure guidance in a cultivated taste, and re-
mains therefore at all times liable to such errors as the Adam and Eve or
the Woman sitting upon a Hillock (B. 198. M.
256.),
whilst the only
attempt at decorative monumental arrangement, An Allegorical Piece
(B. no. M.
296.),
is top-heavy, straggling, and out of all reasonable
proportions.
1
I am not forgetting some studies of animals (particularly a lion and an elephant)
outside of Rembrandt's etched work, to which, at present, I am obliged as much as
possible to confine my attention.
PART III
TECHNICAL NOTES
I
The reader is already aware that modern criticism does not admit
the whole of the etched work formerly attributed to Rembrandt as
genuine.
The result of certain inquiries has been, briefly, this, that we cannot
any longer accept with blind confidence any work whatever that is
attributed to Rembrandt, with signature or without signature, dated or
undated.
We find ourselves, therefore, in a situation from which there is no
logical issue, as we can only test the spurious plates by a comparison with
the genuine ones, but, to know which are the genuine ones, we must
have already distinguished them from the spurious, so that, in order
to make the selection, we, in fact, must have already made it.
The biographical test, in Rembrandt's case, is hardly available, as
there is so little documentary evidence. There was no zealous
contemporary to make an accurate catalogue in the artist's life-time,
as Sir Francis Drake did for the etched work of Mr. Haden. We have
a few facts or traditions. There is, for example, The Hundred Guilder
Print, which Rembrandt exchanged for some Marcantonios, but if it
pleased me to affirm that the linear work only was by the hand of
Rembrandt and the shading by an assistant, I might have the opinion of
artists and connoisseurs against me, yet they could not effectually defend
themselves. I should answer that down to a recent date all expert
opinion accepted plates that we now reject, and I should quote their
prices. A print of The Descent from
the Cross has fetched
36,
a
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
77
Raising
of
Lazarus
71,
a Good Samaritan the same. An Ecce Homo
has fetched
190
and a Gold Weigher 260,
all of them prices consider-
ably exceeding the poor
^8 15
J
-
, which Rembrandt is said to have got
for the Hundred Guilder Print (but did not). I may remind the reader
that Bartsch admitted
375
plates into his Rembrandt catalogue whilst
Mr. Middleton admitted only
329,
and in a certain number of those
admitted even by Mr. Middleton there is a great quantity of manual
work that is not now believed to be by the hand of Rembrandt.
Mr. Haden and I may be asked why we did not discover the spurious
plates twenty years sooner. Mr. Haden's answer is that he never
admitted one of them into his private collection, or had the slightest
desire to possess them ; mine is that the plates selected for description in
"
Etching and Etchers " are all still admitted to be perfectly genuine.
I well remember my feelings about the doubtful plates. I naturally
trusted to the authority of the artists and connoisseurs of all nations
who had accepted them, and as Rembrandt had adopted many different
styles, I did not, at that time, see any reason why he should not have
adopted at times what may be called an engraver's rather than an
etcher's manner when it pleased him to reproduce designs already
executed in some other medium. In a word I believed (and there were
fairly good reasons for this belief) that Rembrandt occasionally executed
for commercial purposes, what may be called industrial work in etching.
It has since been suggested by Mr. Haden for reasons which to me are
satisfactory and convincing, but which do not amount to positive proofs,
that the industrial work formerly attributed to Rembrandt was, in
reality, done for him by pupils or assistants, who, according to the
practice of those days, and even the laws and regulations of their pro-
fession, were not permitted to sign their names. We are, indeed,
compelled to choose between the two alternatives. Either, in certain
plates, plates of which the conception and composition
belonged to
Rembrandt, the handicraft was done by himself purely as a matter of
business, as we used to believe, or else it must have been done as a matter
of business by anonymous pupils or assistants. It seems to me, now,
that the latter is more likelymuch more likely,
considering the strong
personality of Rembrandt's nature,to be true, but our former belief
is excusable for a peculiar reason. The case bears no
resemblance to
78 THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
ordinary cases. Rembrandt was not like a Ruysdael, a Paul Potter, a
Turner, a Meryon, or a Samuel Palmer, who, each in his own way, had
a settled style in etching. Rembrandt had at least half-a-dozen styles,
and these did not succeed each other in any steady chronological order,
but were resumed or thrown aside according to the whim of the moment.
For example, in
1647,
ne etches the famous Portrait
of Jan Six (B.
285.
M.
159 ),
which is the ne plus ultra of his finish as to tone and texture,
but in the following year his style becomes linear again, as in the St.
Jerome writing, seated near a large Tree (B. 103. M.
223.),
or it
combines line and shade, without any delicacy of tone or quality of
darks, as in the Marriage
of
Jason and Creusa (B. 286. M. 112.).
Instead of persevering in a style when he had succeeded in it, Rembrandt
more frequently abandoned it for something else. It requires, then,
considerable assurance in a critic to affirm of a changeable artist who
works in six styles that he has not, on another occasion, tried a seventh.
The most likely test is this. We know enough of Rembrandt to per-
ceive that he must have been a highly intelligent man. If, therefore, any
workmanship attributed to him is manifestly mechanical, it is probably
due to some assistant. We also know that Rembrandt was immensely
productive, and that he must have been a good economist of time. If,
therefore, the mechanical execution had to be long and laborious (par-
ticularly in large plates) we may conclude that he would pass it on to
another, unless, as in the case of the portrait of Six, there was some
technical object in view which could not be attained by another hand.
As for the morality of signing work not literally, as to handicraft, one's
own, the old masters had no more scruples on that point in the graphic
arts than our own contemporaries have in the practice of sculpture.
The questionable plates attributed to Rembrandt are not, however,
confined to works of which the design is due to him whilst the manual
labour was supplied by assistants. A considerable number of plates,
particularly but not exclusively landscapes, formerly attributed to
Rembrandt are now believed not only to have been executed by inferior
hands but conceived and composed by men of inferior artistic endow-
ments. The reader perceives how much more serious is this question
than the other, as that related to handicraft alone and not to the first
conception of a work of art or the interpretation of nature.
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
79
II.
The reader may perhaps be surprised to hear that the supremacy of
Rembrandt in etching is not founded upon any unapproachable technical
superiority. It is mental, and manual so far as it proves the possession of
great executive power, but in such matters as the use of different qualities
of shade, thicknesses of line, and depths of biting, the cleverest professional
etchers of the present day are Rembrandt's superiors, and it is probable
that if he could examine their performances he would acknowledge it.
We have clear evidence that his grounds were not always well composed
or skilfully applied, that the bitings were certainly often deeper and
occasionally shallower than he intended them to be, and that his chemical
and technical science in all ways was less ad-
vanced than our own is to-day. M. Amand-
Durand, who has given a thousand proofs of
the certainty of his own chemical operations,
is persuaded that Rembrandt must have had
what we should consider inferior resources at
his disposal, that he must have been mal outille.
Such etchings as Rembrandt in a Fur Cap and
Dark Dress (B. 6. M.
17.),
Rembrandt with
Bushy Hair (B. 25. M.
49.),
and Rembrandt
with Bushy Hair, and strongly shaded (B.
34.
M.
43.),
are good examples of involuntary
face-blackening by too much acid, yet the
hand that mismanaged these has given us the delightful little Rembrandt
with Moustache and small Beard (B. 2. M. 106.),
which, both for the
perfectly intelligent management of the point and the precisely sufficient
biting, is one of the most faultless works of art in the world.
1
It is probably as a result of the bad quality of an etching-ground that
Rembrandt's own great plate of The Descent from the Cross (B. 81. M.
Rembrandt ivith Moustache
and Small Beard. B. 2.
M. 1 06.
1
This plate has long been known by the ridiculous and almost unintelligible title
Rembrandt aux Trots Moustaches. Even the
"
small beard
"
is objectionable, as it con-
veys an inexact idea. As we use the French word tnoustache, why not use the other
convenient French word, barbiche, or, when a mere tuft, imperiale ?
80 1HE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
1 86.) was destroyed in the biting. As the labour with the needle had
been enormous, the artist does not appear to have summoned courage
to begin the weary task over again, so he entrusted a replica to other
hands, and it is from this copy that the current edition has been printed,
the spoiled plate having only yielded trial proofs enough to demonstrate
its worthlessness. This failure shows the importance of good biting, as
the work with the point was much more artistic in the rejected plate than
in the well-bitten one that Rembrandt too carelessly allowed to go forth
under his own name. Amongst minor failures from the same cause may
be mentioned The Rat Killer
;
an injured Plate (B. 122. M. 260.).
A technical merit that Rembrandt often displayed in an exceptional
degree was his masterly way of combining strong and delicate work
in the same plate, of which there is an excellent example in Rembrandt'
s
Mother, seated, looking to the Right (B.
343.
M.
54.),
where the face
and hands are treated in one style of execution, the dress in another, and
the table-cover and background more summarily in a third The
etching-needle thus becomes like three different instruments which
may be compared to musical instruments played together in concerted
music. Such execution gives the pleasure of difference in unity. It
strongly contrasts, for example, with the unintelligent uniformity of
Van Vliet's execution, which was excessively industrious, but only
resulted in opacity.
The intentional combination of different ways of handling the
point in a 'single plate is not to be confounded with an involuntary
mixture of styles, a fault to which the inexperienced are often exposed
because they have not the power of will and foresight that predetermines
the exact nature of a work of art from the first stroke to the last.
Nothing can prove more convincingly the vigour and sanity of
Rembrandt's
intellect than the decision with which the executive scheme
or project of each work is settled before it is begun. Each separate
etching is an enterprise in itself and may be a new experiment. The
artist has all his powers and faculties under control, he is never carried
beyond his first intention by the seductive detail of nature, and he is
never prevented from observing nature by any fixed habit of execution.
Even in his full maturity he can cast aside styles in which he has been
perfectly
successful, either to resume the practice of an old one or
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT 81
invent a new. Yet, in each work, he remains as faithful to the style
determined upon for that work as if he had never mastered any other.
Such a power of self-direction is very rare in art. All the engravings
of Lucas of Leyden, of Albert Diirer, of Schongauer, are in each case
technically alike. The etchings of Ruysdael, of Ostade, of Paul Potter,
are, in each case, executed on the same principles. All Titian's pen-
drawings are technically the same, all Turner's etchings, if we do not
consider the subject, are but one etching. Samuel Palmer laboriously
brought one kind of etching to its own
perfection. Tenniel's variety as a draughts-
man is in subject, not in execution. Gerome
has a fixed and uniform style with the hard
pencil point, the modern substitute for
silver-point. Sir Frederick Leighton always
draws in the same manner with black and
white chalk on brown paper. All these
artists, by fidelity to one method, reached
and maintained a particular kind of skill,
but Rembrandt had not this special practice
in his favour.
For the same reason, no critic who has a
special doctrine about the practice of etching can
appeal to Rembrandt as an authority. When
Mr. Haden says that an etching ought to be executed in one sitting to
preserve the freshness of the impression we are at liberty to reply that
this can be done in a small linear etching when drawing is preserved but
light and shade only indicated, as, for example, in the little plate of
A
Jew with a High Cap (B.
133.
M.
140.),
or that it can be done
in a larger plate when all accuracy of drawing is abandoned as in The
Large Lion Hunt (B. 114. M.
272.),
but that all etchings by Rembrandt
in which drawing and any approach to complete shading are united must
of necessity have occupied several sittings and certainly did so. If,
on the other hand, a critic were to maintain with Samuel Palmer that so
long as labour is intelligent the value of a work of art is increased in
exact proportion with the amount of toil bestowed upon it we might
answer that there are many plates by Rembrandt, very slightly executed,
G
A "Jew
ivith a High Cap.
B. 133.
M. 14.0.
82 THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
such, for example, as The Bull (B.
253.
M.
289.),
or the little Resurrec-
tion
of
Lazarus (B. 72. M.
215),
to which nothing could have been added
even by the master himself without destruction as they are already complete
according to the style of execution adopted. To turn a sketch into
what is called a finished drawing is to destroy the sketch and substitute
A Sketch for the Hunared Guilder Print.
another thing in its place. There is of course, no objection to finishing
a thing in its own sense. We have a beautiful unfinished etching by
Rembrandt, An Old Man lifting his Hand to his Cap (B.
259.
M.
139.),
in which the head, hand, and cap are carried as far as the etcher intended,
the rest being indicated, apparently for future work. To complete such
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
83
an etching would be to respect the work already done and go on
elsewhere in harmony with it.
There is another doctrine professed and acted upon by some modern
etchers (I know one who is quite faithful to it) that all work in original
etching ought to be executed directly from nature. We have reasons for
believing that Rembrandt did occasionally work from nature on the
copper. The story is that once at Six's country house, where Rembrandt
was present at an early dinner, there was no mustard. The host sent to
fetch some from the village, and Rembrandt betted that before the
servant (who was a slow fellow) returned he would etch a plate. He
accordingly drew on copper the subject thereby immortalised as Six's
Bridge (B. 208. M.
313.)*
which was visible through the window. If
this story (told by Gersaint) is true, as it well may be, it shows that
Rembrandt had a prepared plate with him, ready to do a landscape
directly from nature, and it is highly probable that The Goldweighers
Field (B.
234.
M. 326.)
and several other plates that might be men-
tioned were done in the same way, though not so rapidly.
1
On the
other hand, we have good evidence that some of the most important
plates were done either from complete drawings of the whole subject or
from experimental sketches of their different parts. I have not space to
mention all the plates belonging to one or the other of these two
categories, but amongst the important and most celebrated works I
may mention The Death
of
the Virgin and Christ Healing the Sick (the
Hundred Guilder Print) as executed with the help of preparatory studies
of parts, which are well known to us, whilst as to portraits we have in
the British Museum the original drawing of Cornelis Anslo, from which
the etching was made. The etching of Joseph telling his Dreams (B.37.
M.
205.)
is also an example of etching prepared for by previous work, as
Rembrandt had made first a grisaille of the whole subject and afterwards
a red chalk drawing of the figure of Jacob. Every kind of etching, even
including the elaborate kind of tone-etching which has been adopted for
the interpretation of pictures, may claim authority from the various and
1
I had nearly written not in such a hurry, but that would have been inaccurate, as
Rembrandt, with the consummate power of self-direction that we have been noticing,
merely decided to adopt his most summary means of expression, and then hurried himself
no more than the slow Dutchman who had gone to fetch the mustard.
G 2
84 THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
versatile practice of the great master. If any one asserts that linear
expression is a legitimate purpose in etching he certainly has Rembrandt
on his side, but if he says that it is the only legitimate purpose of the
art, then Rembrandt answers with tone plates like his St. Jerome; in the
dark manner (B. 105. M.
214.),
or he combines the most vigorous, and I
may say magical, use of line with powerful and massive shading as in
The Presentation ; in Rembrandt's dark manner (B. 50.
M.
243.).
Ill
I have still to consider the question of the spurious plates, and that
of assistance given to Rembrandt by pupils or other artists in plates that
were designed by him and probably more or less worked upon by his
own hand. I was prepared to go into these questions fully, but limits
of space and time compel me to be laconic, so that I can only give
results. This can be done most quickly by a list with a few words
of commentary.
The Descent
from the Cross (B. 81. M. 187.).
The large etching
of this subject. Rembrandt himself first etched it on the same scale
and with elaborate shading, all by his own hand. The etching ground,
having been badly composed or ill-applied, did not resist the acid so
that the plate was ruined beyond redemption in the biting. Three
proofs were taken and the plate abandoned, but a second etching was
made from it, a copy in which the drawing is vulgar and the shading
commonplace, but the biting clear and sound. The copy is obviously
not by Rembrandt himself, though made under his supervision. It
is a commercial plate.
Ecce Homo (B.
77.
M. 200.). Also a large commercial plate done
by some assistant under Rembrandt's supervision, the etcher proceeding
as a copyist (we know this from proofs of the work in progress)
and guided by Rembrandt's corrections, but, of course, unable to give
Rembrandt's handling in the shaded parts whilst he vulgarised his
drawing. What remains of the original author is the composition,
and the general arrangement of chiaroscuro.
The Raising
of
Lazarus (B.
73.
M. 188.). Here the share of
Rembrandt himself is rather more difficult to determine. Judging
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
85
from his usual habits I should say that he would never have been
at the trouble to shade the arched border in this way. Several plates
by Rembrandt are arched, but in a sketchy manner. If, then, an
assistant was employed for the border he probably did other work
besides, most likely all the heavy shading, perhaps all the figure of
Christ and the figures to the left. Lazarus and the astonished
spectators to the right are drawn without useless labour and display
great power of expression, but if the reader will compare the manual
execution with the firm, clear, and decided drawing of the faces in
The Hundred Guilder Print he will see that these, though cleverly
executed, do not display the same marvellous use of line. Mr. Haden
thinks that the arrangement of the subject and the "melodramatic
action" are not like Rembrandt. We know, indeed, the small
Resurrection
of
Lazarus (B. 72. M.
215.),
which is remarkable for
the absence of stage effect. My own conclusion is that the framework
and all the heavy shading are certainly not Rembrandt's handiwork,
whilst Lazarus and the spectators near him are very doubtful.
The Good Samaritan (B. 90. M. 185.).
A laborious commercial plate,
very different from the preceding. After the sublime we come down to
the pretty. What strikes me in this plate is that it belongs strictly to its
own time. Its interpretation of nature and its peculiar finish are of the
seventeenth century, all through, but Rembrandt's work in etching dis-
tinguishes itself from modern work by sheer superiority, not by being
old-fashioned. The invention of the subject has been traced by Vosmaer
to
J.
van de Velde. Mr. Haden attributes the execution to Ferdinand
Bol.
The Mountebank or Charlatan (B. 129. M. 117.)-
Mr. Haden
refers to Vosmaer as having attributed the design of The Charlatan to
J.
van de Velde, but Vosmaer only mentions the Charlatan in a list of
things of a certain date and his remark did not refer to this etching
but to The Pancake Woman? This little plate is of first-rate excellence,
and Rembrandt's.
1
Vosmaer is giving a list of etchings executed at a certain time, and mentions, amongst
others,
"
le Charlatan, la Faiseuse de Galettespiece qui rappelle beaucoup une estampe de
J.
Van de Velde." The reader sees that the word piece, which is in the singular number,
refers to one etching only, and that the last mentioned.
86 THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
The Pancake Woman (B. 124. M. 264.).
Mr. Haden says that
J.
Van de Velde is
"
the reputed author
"
of The Pancake Woman, and refers
to Vosmaer as an authority, but Vosmaer did not attribute either the de-
sign or the execution to Van de Velde, he merely said that the etching
reminded him very much of a print by that artist. I have always been
struck by something foreign to Rembrandt's genius in the scheme of this
very cleverly executed plate. He may have accepted a suggestion.
Three Oriental Heads. First Head, Full Face,
"
"Jacob Cats
'
(B.
286. M. 122.), Second Head, a Profile to the Left (B. 287. M.
123.),
Third Head, a Profile to the Right (B. 288. M. 124.).
There is nothing by Rembrandt resembling these heads either in
conception or execution, and there are two plates by Lievens resembling
them in subject and treatment but less bitten. Mr. Haden believes all
three to be by Lievens, who had a taste for staring eyes and heavy head-
dresses. To this M. Emile Michel replies that Lievens never was a
pupil of Rembrandt, and it seems that he lived away from him. As
there is a certain lightness of hand in Lievens that there is not here, and
as the conception is obviously influenced by Lievens, I should conclude
that the plates were done by some contemporary unknown to us.
A Beggar and a Companion Piece (B.
177.
M. 112.). Easily recog-
nisable by the inscriptions fis vinnich Kout and dats niet.
Suggested by two plates of Beham with inscriptions identical in sense
though not verbally the same. These with Rembrandt's name are
cleverly executed but not so delicately as many of his beggars. Mr.
Haden thinks that Savry etched them. Vosmaer mentions a sketch by
Rembrandt with the first inscription. He may have made two sketches,
etched afterwards, somewhat heavily, by another hand, under his direction
or by his leave.
St. Jerome sitting at the Foot
of
a Tree (B. 100. M. 190.).
I give
Mr. Middleton's title. Mr. Haden calls the plate
"
St. Jerome in
Meditation," which may easily confuse the reader, as Charles Blanc
calls his
76
(M. 210.), St. Jerome en Meditation [maniere noire) and
his
77
(M.
176.),
St. Jerome en Meditation {Vieillard Homme de Lettres).
Mr. Haden says that this little plate, easily known by the curious
heraldic lion (the size of a greyhound), is by Bol. Though effective
in its own way as an arrangement of lights and darks, and prettily
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
87
executed in a neat old-fashioned style we may be sure that it was neither
designed nor executed by Rembrandt.
The Flight into Egypt; a small upright Print (B.
52.
M.
184.).
I have no belief in the authenticity of this little etching, which would
be creditable to a minor artist.
Adverse Fortune (B. in. M. 262.). Very unlike Rembrandt, both
in conception and execution.
The Gold Weigher (B. 281. M. 138).
From a design by Rembrandt
but mainly executed by some inferior and more mechanical hand. The
head and shoulders of the principal figure are believed to be by Rem-
brandt himself.
Rembrandt drawing from a Model (B. 192. M. 284.).
Probably
sketched by the master to be shaded by some assistant, and then
abandoned before the shading was finished.
St. Jerome, an unfinished Piece (B. 104. M.
234.).
Mr. Haden
says that this is from a drawing by Titian sold in London at Dr.
Wellesley's sale which was still recent in
1877.
The lion, however,
was absent from the drawing and the saint's place was occupied by a
recumbent figure of Venus.
Mr. Haden does not say that the drawing has been reversed in the
etching, so we may infer that it was not. It was Titian's habit in
work that he did not correct with the square always to incline lines
to the right. We find an inclination in the same direction here (see
buildings). Rembrandt himself had not this tendency.
The landscape has been executed cleverly on a principle not usually
Rembrandt's, objects presenting themselves in the flat as if cut out of
card-board (see tree trunk). It reminds one of Felix Buhot's style
with flat facets and short, decided strokes, a manually skilful style,
but unlike Rembrandt's most personal way of etching. The figure
of the saint may be by him.
Jan
Antonides van der Linden (B. 264. M. 167.).
Charles Blanc
thought that changes made after the fourth state of this portrait were
modern. M. Dutuit thinks that changes after the third state are not
Rembrandt's. Mr. Middleton agrees, in substance, with M. Dutuit. In
other words the greater part of the shading has been added by some-
body else.
88 THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
To me the whole plate is unsatisfactory, considered as a Rembrandt.
The face may be creditable and has some quiet character, but anybody
could etch the costume and the background, and as for the hand it is
wooden and the forefinger a mere stick. It is very inferior to
Rembrandt's usual incisive marking of character in hands.
The Onion Woman (B.
134.
M. 66.). Mr. Middleton attributes the
coarse and ugly appearance of this plate to over-biting, but over-biting
would not affect the original intelligence of treatment in the use of line
which is here mediocre and destitute of Rembrandt's usual delicacy of
observation. Mr. Middleton argues that the execution here is no worse
than that of Lazarus Klap (B. 171. M.
72.).
Perhaps both plates may
have been executed by Rembrandt in a lazy mood.
"
It is impossible,"
says Mr. Ruskin, "to bring drawing to any point of fine Tightness with
half-applied energy."
The Little Dog Sleeping (B. 158. M. 267.). I like the little doggie
who sleeps soundly and who for the last two centuries has been sleeping
more soundly still. Rembrandt, who took an interest in sleep, may
have been tempted by the subject. Mr. Middleton says,
"
It is an
open question whether The Little Dog Sleeping is the work of
Rembrandt at all." A copy is in existence in which the sharp
linear touches are wanting. The best plate is still inferior to The Hog
(B.
157.
M.
227.)
and even to the Sketch
of
a Dog (B.
371.
M. 266.)
in the use of line, but it is well lighted and was admitted as authentic
in the Burlington Club exhibition of
1877.
Besides the plates already given in this list there are a number of
landscapes, principally of small size, what may be called pocket plates,
that have been unwarrantably attributed to Rembrandt, and others that
are doubtful. One of the best of these is a dry-point Landscape, with a
Fisherman in a Boat (B.
243.
M. rej.
19.),
which previous catalogue
makers had accepted, but which Mr. Middleton rejects. The difficulty
in ascribing it to Rembrandt lies in the fact that we have no other dry-
point certainly by him, of a similar subject, with which to compare it,
and bitten plates do not afford materials for a technical comparison. I
incline to accept this as Rembrandt's work because it looks so modern,
and his other dry-point work does the same. I have no hesitation in
rejecting the unmeaning scrawl called Landscape, with a Canal and a Man
THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
89
Fishing (B.
244.
M. rej. 8.),
though an impression of it has been sold for
the relatively prodigious sum of 148.
There may be twenty minutes'
work in this perfectly worthless performance. I agree, too, with the
rejection of A Landscape with
five
Cottages, unfinished (B.
255.
M. rej.
12.).
The subject might have interested Rembrandt, but the execution
is much weaker and less assured than his. There is a long-shaped Land-
Landscape with a Fisherman in a Boat. B. 243.
M. rej.
19.
scape, with a clump
of
Trees by the Road Side (B. 229. M. rej.
15.),
which
admirably expresses the peculiar character of Dutch scenery, with the
road on a dyke above the level of the polders, but the workmanship is
certainly not Rembrandt's.
I have not space to go through all the rejected landscapes, and have
already invited the reader to the study of some undoubtedly authentic
ones, by which he will be able to form his own judgment.
It is much easier to say that Rembrandt did not execute certain pieces
of work than to affirm who did execute them, and it is safer to accept
the negative part of Mr. Haden's criticism than the positive. For
9
o THE ETCHINGS OF REMBRANDT
example, it appears certain now that Lievens and van Vliet were never
pupils of Rembrandt, and in 1 631
Lievens had left Holland. There
may have been a difficulty about Bol's collaboration on account of his
age, as he was only sixteen in 1632. Besides, it is always difficult to
name assistants, especially when their work is mixed up with that of the
master. There is a celebrated and successful living etcher from pictures
who has often employed an assistant whom I know personally. I am
familiar with the styles of both artists, but should not be able to
separate their work on the same plate. The collaboration is kept secret
and not a critic or other artist living has ever suspected it, still less
has he been able to guess the assistant's name. I know it because he
told me.
Just a word in conclusion. I have been studying the works of
Rembrandt's immediate predecessors and contemporaries in etching with
a view to understand his relative position more accurately. The result
has been only to deepen my sense of the master's incomparable greatness,
of his sterling originality, and especially of that wonderful quality in
him by which he does not belong to the seventeenth century but quite as
much to the closing years of the nineteenth. In like manner, when
it comes, he will be at home in the twentieth century, and in many
another after it.
FINIS.
.*
MALTA
AND THE KNIGHTS
HOSPITALLERS
By the
REV. W. K. R. BEDFORD,
M.A
Author
of
"
The Blazon
of
Episcopacy
"
"
Regulations
of
the Knights' Hospital at Malta,'''
&c.
LONDON
SEELEY AND CO. LIMITED, ESSEX STREET, STRAND
NEW YORK, MACMILLAN AND CO.
1894
Richard Clay and Sons, Limited
London and Bungay
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
PLATES.
PAGE
Isola Point. Etched by A. Ansted Frontispiece
Rabato, Gozo. Drawn by T. H. Crawford. Engraved by Walter L. Colls ... 10
Citta Vecchia. Etched by A. Ansted from a drawing by Edward Lear 24
Chapel of Our Lady of Philermos. Engraved by Walter L. Colls
38
ILLUSTRATIONS IN THE TEXT.
Ruins of Hagiar Kim
7
Kabiri in the Museum at Valletta
9
Phoenician Pottery II
Egyptian Figure
13
Plan of Valletta 18
The Goose, Isola Point 20
Strada San Giovanni, Valletta. Drawn by A. Ansted 26
Exterior of St. John's Church. Drawn by R. Serle
29
Interior of St. John's Church
31
Tomb of the Grand Master Pinto
33
High Altar of St. John's Church
35
Crypt of St. John's Church
39
The French Chapel, St. John's Church 41
Tomb of the Grand Master Carraffa
\%
B 2
4
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
PAGE
Tapestries in St. John's Church. St. Paul and St. Andrew
43
The Last Supper
47
The Triumph of Charity, after Rubens ...
49
Marsamuscctto. Drawn by R. Serlc
55
Knights Hospitallers, from an engraving, 1676
59
Strada Vescovo, Valletta. Drawn by R. Serle 62
Strada Marina, Valletta. Drawn by R. Serle
63
Tapestries in the Council Chamber
65, 67
Romulus and Remus, in the Museum at Valletta
71
Norman Capital and Figure with Gnostic Inscription
72
MALTA
EARLY HISTORY
When the traveller to the East has accomplished half of his
Mediterranean voyage, which is generally on the fourth day after leaving
Gibraltar, he enters the Malta channel, a stretch of sea between Sicily on
the north, the snowy peak of Etna occasionally making itself visible,
and on the south a rocky shore, which swells gradually up to hills of
some 600 or 700 feet in height, without trees, and therefore presenting
a heavy though undulating outline
;
about a third of its surface bare
rock, and the other two-thirds partitioned off into small fields by
enclosures of loose stones similar to those of Westmoreland or the North
Riding. This is Gozo, and his eye will inform him that the country
is productive and highly cultivated, even if another sense is not pene-
trated by the odour of garlic, the favourite green crop of the Gozo
farmer. The fields in March are red with clover blossom
;
the orange
groves are in flower or fruit all the year long, yet there is no vacuity
or want of energy about the people. Passing the mouth of the strait
of Comino where, upon the little island of the same name, the un-
lucky Sultan man of war was wrecked a few years ago, the steeper
cliffs of the western coast-line of Malta come into view, in colour
of a bright orange, and the eye can distinctly make out that great
geological fault which traverses both islands, as Mr. Adams so
happily says, "just as if Atlas had raised the entire island group to
the level of the higher plateau, when a large portion in the middle
gave way and sank, leaving the remainder of Malta south-eastward,
6 MALTA
and the west of Gozo, beyond Migiar Scini gorge, at much about
the same levels." As the voyager passes the bay of St. Paul, now
clearly identified with the Apostle's shipwreck, the coast-line becomes
less interesting, nor is there anything in the whole face of the country
which can be called imposing or picturesque until the harbour of Valletta
comes into view. There are, however, hidden among these unprepossess-
ing terraces remnants of prehistoric architecture, which so good an
authority as Professor Sayce has pronounced superior to any others to
be found in the Mediterranean, relics which the visitor to Malta ought
not to pass by without notice.
Hagiar Kimthe stone of Venerationis the most accessible and best
preserved of these vestiges of hoary eld. We can only carry back its
modern history to the excavation in the year
1839,
when the soil and
stones accumulated during centuries of neglect were first cleared away
hospitals for the sick, for women, for orphans, poor children, and
foundlings, gratuitous dispensaries and distribution of food, in which
purposes in
1796
they spent nearly 13,000large tracts of country
were planted with trees, the greatest possible benefit to the island, though
viewed with distrust by Maltese to this day, who think they harbour
mosquitoes and banditti. G. M. de Vignacourt in 16
14
completed an
aqueduct for Valletta, and Pinto a century later cultivated mulberry
trees for the production of silk
;
scarce a Grand Master can be named
who did not do something for the general welfare of the commonalty.
MALTA
77
Thus the people throve, while luxury and aristocratic pomp sapped the
energy of the members of the Order. For many years the galleys
scoured the Mediterranean in pursuit of the corsairs, but Perellos
in
1697
substituted for them decked ships of a larger size, and the navy
seems gradually to have declined ;
during the eighteenth century it
became the custom to permit privateers to rendezvous in the harbours of
Valletta, and from the memoirs of the Earl of Charlemont in
1750
we
learn that the warfare which used to be carried on by the Knights had
fallen into the hands of Captain Fortunatus Wright and other adven-
turers. Yet it is pleasant to remember that almost the last duty
performed by the fleet of the Order was to carry succour to the Italian
and Sicilian sufferers by the earthquake of 1783.
The internal dissensions, which had always served to cripple the
exertions of the Order, became much more serious when the French
Revolution deprived them at one swoop of revenue to the amount
of
^50,000.
The contagion spread through the commanderies in the
other European countries, and despite the conversion of plate into
money, and every expedient which insolvency suggests, the Grand
Master had reached the end of his resources, and the Knights
were prepared to take any desperate step to secure their individual
safety. Nevertheless, had it depended upon the loyal Maltese, the
annexation of Malta by the French in
1798
would only have been
effected at the cost of much blood and treasure.
"
It was well," said one
of Napoleon's lieutenants, as they viewed the stupendous fortifications,
"
that we had somebody to hand us the keys of these gates, or we should
have had some trouble in forcing our way in." At the very last moment,
when treachery and pusillanimity had admitted the invader, the native
militia who garrisoned the two forts in Valletta, known as the Cavaliers
of St. John and St. James, were with the utmost difficulty persuaded to
surrender them without an independent struggle, and as soon as the main
body of the French army had departed, although it carried with it the
principal part of the Maltese regular troops, the natives rose, as they
declared they would, against the plunderers of their churches, and un-
assisted by any foreign power shut up the
3,000
Frenchmen left behind
within the fortifications of Valletta. This was on the 3rd September,
1798,
and for two years the patriotic islanders made every effort to
78 MALTA
take the city, with such small assistance as could be spared by Nelson
and the English and Neapolitan Governments. Disease and famine pre-
vailed among the unfortunates who had been left in the city, and in fact
the island generally, and the loss of the Maltese during the struggle is
computed to have been 20,000. Towards the end of the siege, in which
the English had gradually become the allies and confidants of the
Maltese, Sir Alexander Ball, one of Nelson's lieutenants, was elected
Governor, and suggested a British protectorate. According to the treaty
of Amiens the Order of St. John was to be revived under certain
conditions and limitations, and the English troops were to evacuate the
island in three months. This was so little to the taste of the Maltese
that a deputation was despatched to London to protest against the pro-
posal, and to solicit the English to remain in the country. When war
broke out again, very shortly, the British were still in Malta, where they
remained until, in 18
14,
the Treaty of Paris ratified that sentence which
remains engraven on the Main Guard,
"
The love of the Maltese and the
voice of Europe confirms these islands to great and invincible Britain
"
;
and (adds a candid foreign critic)
"
I think that the Maltese have no
cause to repent the consequences of that love."
THE END
INDEX
Armoury, 66
Auberges, 52
54
Bajazet,
16, 30
Balconies, 61
Ball, Sir Alexander,
78
Baracca, upper and lower,
56
Baviere,
54
Beaujolais, Count de,
34
Bernini,
34
Borgo, see Citta Vittoriosa
Burmola,
75
Candelissa,
22, 24
Caravaggio,
30, 66
Catherine II., 66
Chapel of Bones, 60
Charles V.,
13, 16
Citta Vecchia, see Notabile
Citta Vittoriosa,
18,
75
Coast line,
5
Corradino heights, 10
Costume,
74
Cottonera lines,
52
Council Chamber,
64
Cussar, Girolamo, 28
Cyprus,
15
De Vos,
28,
45, 46
Dragut,
19, 21,
69
Egyptian inscriptions,
75
English in Malta,
74, 75, 78
Floriana,
56, 60,
74
French in Malta,
77
Gafa, Melchior,
37
Geological fault,
5,
10
Gerard, 1
5
Giant's tower, 10
Gozo,
5, 11, 13, 16
Grand Masters of Knights Hospitallers
:
Aubusson,
15, 30 ; CarraiFa, 38;'
Cot-
toner,
34, 75;
Hompesch,
34
; La Sengle,
18
;
La Vallette,
17, 25, 27, 38, 72
;
Lascaris,
22, 38 ; L'Isle Adam,
14, 38,
58, 72 ;
Paula,
42 ; Perellos,
34, 45, 46,
60, 64 ;
Pinto,
34, 57,
76 ; Rohan,
38,
54, 69 ;
Vignacourt,
38, 66, 76 ; Vil-
hena,
58, 63, 69
Great Harbour, 18
Hagiar Kim, 6
Hospital of St. John at Jerusalem, 1
5
Valletta, 5860
Houlton, Sir Victor,
51
Isola, see Senglea
Kabiri, 6
Langues,
15
Le Blond,
64
Library, Valletta,
69
Mahomet II., 16
Maitland, Sir Thomas,
56
8o
INDEX
Mandcraggio,
$4
Marsamuscctto, 19, 22,
54
Marsa Scirocco, 6,
10
Museum at Valletta, 6, 70
Mustapha, 21, 25
Napoleon I.,
56, 57
Notabilc, 12, 23, 38, 41, 58
Opera house, 63
Palace, Valletta, 63, 64
Palazzo Parisio,
57
Philip II., 24, 25
Phoenician remains, 6,
912, 71
Piali,
19
Pirates, 12, 13, 14, 77
Poussin, Nicholas,
45,
46
Prcti, Mattco, 30, 45
Raymond de Puy, 1
5
Rhodes, I
5
Archbishop of, 38
Roger of Sicily, 13, 14
Roman remains, 12, 72
Rubens,
45
St. Angclo, 13, 14, 18, 19, 21,
5S
St. Elmo, 18, 20, 21,
74
St. Jean d'Acre, 1
5
St. Paul's Bay, 6, 10, 25
St. Paul's Cave, 12
Scnglca, 18, 22,
23, 75
Sliema,
56
Solyman, 16, 17
Starkey, Oliver,
27, 38
Syracuse, 16, 19
Tapestries in St. John's,
45
Council Chamber,
64
Teatro Manoelo,
63
Templars, 1
5
Tripoli, 16
University, Valletta,
73
Vassalo, Dr.,
70, 71
Vipcran, 19, 23, 24
Zanoguerra, 23
Zizim,
16, 30
WaOtriiflii
, J/ke /oT^ClcurocL
'">>' .
'
JOSIAH WEDGWOOD
MASTER-POTTER
By
A. H. CHURCH, F.R.S.
Professor of
Chemistry in the Royal Academy
of
Arts
Author
of
"
English Earthenware" &c.
LONDON
SEELEY AND CO. LIMITED, ESSEX STREET, STRAND
NEW YORK, MACMILLAN AND CO
T894
.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER I
HIS PRECURSORS
Elers of Bradwell
;
John and Thomas Astbury ;
Ralph Shaw
;
Thomas and
John Wedgwood ; Enoch Booth and Ralph Daniel pages 710
CHAPTER II
HIS EARLY YEARS
Birth, Education, Traditions of Childhood
;
Apprenticeship ; Partnerships with
John Harrison and Thomas Whieldon pages 11
15
CHAPTER III
AS MASTER-POTTER
The Ivy House Works
; Increase of Business
; Division of Labour Introduced
;
Finish versus Vitality ; Public Spirit and Generosity pages 16
19
CHAPTER IV
HIS CERAMIC IMPROVEMENTS
Queen's Ware
;
Black Basalt Ware and Encaustic Painting ;
White Semi-
Porcelain
;
Agate and Marbled Wares
; Terra-Cotta, &c pages 20
31
CHAPTER V
HIS INVENTION OF THE
"
JASPER
"
BODY
Novelty of its Composition ; Peculiar Properties ; Range of Colour ; Solid
Jasper and Jasper-Dip pages 32
35
CHAPTER VI
THE BARBERINI OR PORTLAND VASE
Modelled from the Original by Henry Webber
;
Discovery of the Vase, its Date,
Decoration and Material ; Variations in and Prices realised by Wedgwood's
Copies pages 36
39
4
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER VII
HIS CAMEOS, MEDALLIONS AND PLAQUES
Early Trials in Colour
;
Cameos and Intaglios in Scmi-Porcclain and Black
Basalt ; Cameos and Medallions in the Jasper Body
;
Plaques and Tablets
;
Important Examples pages 40
53
CHAPTER VIII
HIS PORTRAIT CAMEOS AND MEDALLIONS
Historical Series; Heads of
"
Illustrious Modern Personages" ; Identification or
the Subjects
;
Unusually Large Cameos ;
Variety in Subject and Treat-
ment ; Models by Flaxman, Hackvvood and others pages
54
61
CHAPTER IX
1
VASES IN THE JASPER BODY
Not made before 1781 ;
Period of Perfection; Decadence; Designs of Vases
and Pedestals ; Wedgwood's Letter of 1786 to Sir W. Hamilton ; Prices of
Fine Examples
;
Conventional Ornaments pages 62
67
CHAPTER X
MISCELLANEOUS PRODUCTIONS IN JASPER
Chessmen ; Match-pots, Pedestals and Drums
;
Pipe-bowls and Hookahs
; Tea
and Coffee Sets ;
Salt-cellars ;
Bulb-stands and Flower-pots
;
Lamps and
Candlesticks ;
Bell-pulls, Scent-bottles pages 68
76
CHAPTER XI
LATER YEARS
The Brick-House Works
; Marriage ; Partnership with Thomas Wedgwood
;
Purchase of the Site of
"
Etruria
"
; Grand Trunk Canal
;
London Show-
Room ; A Surgical Operation
;
Partnership with Thomas Bentley ;
Etruria,
the Village, Works, and Hall
;
Scientific Labours
;
Death pages 77
87
CHAPTER XII
POSITION AS AN ART-POTTER
A Pervading Style ;
Merits and Defects
; Sources of his Designs ;
Artists Em-
ployed
96
CHAPTER XIII
COLLECTIONS AND COLLECTORS
Provincial Museums ; Public Collections in London
;
Formation and Dispersal
of Private Collections
;
Criteria of Quality and Date ;
Marks . . . pages
97103
Bibliographical Notes page 104
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
PLATES
PAGE
L Portland Vase ; white on dark slate-colour, solid jasper
(J.L.P.) . Frontispiece
II. Plaque, Sacrifice of Iphigeni a ; white and green jasper (M.P.G.) 40
III. Two Medallions, A Zephyr, blue and white jasper
;
A Monumental Group,
black and white jasper (A.H.C.) 46
IV. Medallion, Portrait of Flaxman
;
terra-cotta (S.K.M.)
94
ILLUSTRATIONS IN THE TEXT
1. Josiah Wedgwood. From the engraving by S. W. Reynolds, after the portrait
by Sir Joshua Reynolds (B.M.)
13
2. Chestnut-Basket
;
cream-coloured ware (M.P.G.) 22
3.
Dessert-Dish
;
tinted white ware (S.K.M.)
24
4. Mug, silver mounts
;
black basalt ware (S.K.M.) 26
5.
Lamp ; black basalt ware (M.P.G.)
27
6. Vase; cream ware coloured in imitation of granite (M.P.G.)
30
7.
Teapot
;
chocolate, terra-cotta, white reliefs (S.K.M.)
31
8. Medallion, Head of Medusa ; blue and white jasper, laminated ground
(J.L.P.)
42
9.
Plaque, Sacrifice to Hymen ; black and white jasper (J.L.P.)
45
10. Plaque, Treaty between France and England
; blue and white jasper
(J.L.P.)
.
47
11. Medallion, Bacchanalian Boys
;
black and white jasper (S.K.M.) . . . . . v
48
12. Medallion, Achilles with the Body of Hector
;
green, black and white jasper
(J-L.P.)
'
.
49
6
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
PAGE
13. Plaque, Marriage of Cupid and Psyche
;
blue and white jasper (B.M.) . .
51
14. Medallion, Sir F. W. Herschel ; blue and white jasper (M.P.G.) 56
15. Medallion, Dr. Johnson ;
blue and white jasper
(J.
L.P.)
57
16. Medallion, E. Bourne; blue and white jasper (J.L.P.) 58
17. Medallion, King of the Two Sicilies ;
blue and white jasper (J.L.P.) ....
59
18. Medallion, Catherine II. of Russia ;
dark green and white jasper (J.L.P.), . . 60
19. Vase, Apollo and the Muses ;
blue and white jasper (M.P.G.)
65
20,21. Pedestal, Blind Man's Buff; green and white jasper (S.K.M.) . . . . 70,71
22. Bowl, Ivy festoons and pendant Cameos ; white, green and lilac jasper (M.P.G.) 72
23. Sugar-bason and Cover, Vine pattern
;
pale olive and lilac (S.K.M.) ....
72
24. Saucer, festoons and cameos ;
white, green and lilac jasper (S.K.M.) ....
73
25. Flowerpot and Saucer, reliefs of fern-leaves
;
cane-colour, terra cotta (S.K.M.)
74
26. 27. Pair of Candlesticks, Children and Trees ;
white and blue jasper
(J.L.P.) .
75
28. Statuette, Seated Figure, in right hand a syrinx
;
terra-cotta (S.K.M.) ....
95
The examples from which the above illustrations are taken are in the following
collections :
Mr.
J.
Lumsden Propert (J.L.P.)
British Museum (B.M.)
South Kensington Museum (S.K.M.)
Museum of Practical Geology, Jermyn Street (M.P.G.)
Mr. A. H. Church (A.H.C.)
JOSIAH
WEDGWOOD
CHAPTER I
HIS PRECURSORS
Elers
of
Bradwell ; John and Thomas Astbury ; Ralph Shaw; Thomas ana John
Wedgwood ; Enoch Booth, and Ralph Daniel.
During the last quarter of the seventeenth century two potters of
exceptional skill and marked individuality were at work in England.
The earlier of these artists in clay was John Dwight of Fulham, a
sketch of whose life and labours was given in the Portfolio for
1893.
Dwight, whose artistic productions probably date from the year
1671,
exercised no recognisable influence upon the other potters of his day.
It was otherwise with the later ceramist, the Dutchman, John Philip
Elers of Bradwell Wood and Dimsdale, near Burslem. He, with his
brother David, came over from Amsterdam soon after the Revolution
of 1688. As early as the year 1692 or
1693
his manufacture had
attained a high degree of perfection; at this time he had a warehouse
for the sale of his goods in the Poultry in London. Although his
undertaking did not prove a commercial success and his own potworks
was abandoned about the year
1
7 1 o, Elers really initiated a complete
change in the methods and style of Staffordshire earthenware. It is
scarcely to be contested that he introduced into the district the process
of glazing with salt, and thus founded a special local industry which
for seventy years formed a considerable factor in the prosperity of
"
The Potteries." He perfected if he did not introduce the process
8 JOSIAH WEDGWOOD
of washing, levigating, and otherwise preparing clays, and thus effected
a marked improvement in the fineness, durability, solidity and general
physical properties of the "bodies" or "pastes" of which they
formed the chief constituent. But Elers did more than this,
for a third innovation in the English practice of potting may be
reasonably attributed to him. He used the lathe so as to turn his
pieces into forms far thinner and more uniformly exact in shape than
any which the wheel or the whirler could produce. The advent
of
J.
P. Elers had in the end a most marked effect, though not one
immediately perceptible, upon the subsequent productions of
" The
Potteries." It started the more intelligent and enterprising of the
native master-potters upon new lines,lines which, though they then
included something of a foreign element, soon acquired a thoroughly
English character. There is, indeed, an immense interval and contrast
between the grand, massive, picturesque and quaint, yet clumsy, coarse
and cumbrous platters, tygs and posset-pots of the latter half of the
seventeenth century, on the one hand, and, on the other, the dainty,
sharply-turned tea-sets of fine red stoneware made by Elers, which
not even Wedgwood himself, with all the appliances of sixty years
later, could rival, at least in this material. Elers' ornaments, when he
added them to his vessels, were sharp in execution, graceful in design,
and in thorough keeping with the fine texture of his ware. They
were impressed, upon lumps of clay stuck on to the turned pieces of
ware, by means of brass moulds or stamps sharply cut or engraved
with intaglio designs. A may-blossom, a bird, an interlacement of
curves, a cross formed of fleur-de-lis, figured amongst his favourite
devices, the superfluous clay being scraped off from the edges of the
reliefs by means of a small tool. Elers and his proceedings were
at first regarded with jealousy, but soon received the homage of
imitation. A potter, John Astbury by name, obtained admission
to Elers' factory; by feigning idiocy he secured employment therein
in some humble capacity until he had learnt their secret methods
of procedure. Then he modified and extended the processes which
he had surreptitiously acquired, and so was able to make a large
variety of cheap and curious wares. Never quite equal in fineness of
body and sharpness of ornament to the productions of Elers, the pieces
J0S1AH
WEDGWOOD
9
turned out by John
Astbury are not mere imitations. For the paste
of his ware he used various clays, which acquired in the kiln
a red, fawn, buff, orange, or chocolate huesome of these colours
being developed by the glaze employed. Generally, his ornaments
were applied in Devon or pipe clay and stamped. They consisted
of foliage and flowers; crowns, harps, shells, stags, lions, birds, and
heraldic ornaments. For the inside of his tea-pots he often used
a wash of white clay, and he was continually making experiments
in the mixing and tempering of clays. Thus it happened that about
the year 1720 he was led to introduce a due proportion of silica, in the
form of ground flint,
1
into the body of his ware, in order to secure
a higher degree of refractoriness in the fire, as well as less shrinkage.
To his son, Thomas Astbury, who commenced business in
1723
at
Shelton, may be attributed further improvements in earthenware
bodies. He it was who first produced the
"
cream-colour," which
afterwards, as perfected by Josiah Wedgwood, displaced almost all
other materials for useful table ware.
To these potters, Elers and Astbury, due credit must be given.
They were the forerunners of Wedgwood, who in a long letter to his
partner Bentley, in the year
1777,
clearly defined and honourably
acknowledged the indebtedness of the potters of his day to the improved
processes introduced by the foreign artist. Elers and his immediate
successors inaugurated an era of experimental inquiry
;
but the great
potter, whose chief labours in the ceramic art I shall endeavour to
describe in the present paper, accomplished a greater and more complete
task. Under happier circumstances than those of his predecessors, with
a keener sense of what was beautiful and appropriate, with more
untiring industry and greater commercial aptitude, aided moreover by
accomplished advisers, Wedgwood became the chief agent in the trans-
formation of an entire manufacture. The year
1760, when he may be
regarded as having become thoroughly established as a master-potter,
marks the boundary between that which is crude and archaic and that
which is refined and modern. As to what were the losses involved in the
change wrought by Wedgwood something will be said later on in this
essay
;
there can be no doubt that the gains were great.
1
This discovery was attributed by Wedgwood to Heath a potter, of Shelton.
io
JOSIAH WEDGWOOD
Although the year 1760 has been named as a critical date in the
history of Staffordshire earthenware, it must not be supposed that the
inception of many improvements and changes had not occurred earlier,
nor, on the other hand, that the older methods did not linger on,
especially in the minor potworks, to the very close of the eighteenth
century. Then, too, it should be remembered that many local potters
besides those previously named contributed important elements to the
final result. During the forty years 1720- 1760 numerous patents
for ceramic improvements were taken out, and unpatented inventions
made or utilised. Amongst the more important of these may be named
the slip-kiln, used first by Ralph Shaw
;
the fixing of the proportions in
which various clays should be mixed, by Thomas and John Wedgwood
;
the introduction of liquid glazes or dips, by Enoch Booth
;
and the em-
ployment of plaster of Paris for moulds, by Ralph Daniel. It would,
however, be tedious, were it possible, to present a resume of the various
methods and materials contributed by Wedgwood's immediate prede-
cessors to the art of potting. That he availed himself of many of them,
as well as improved and added to them, is certain.
CHAPTER II
HIS EARLY TEARS
Birth; Education; Traditions
of
Childhood; Apprenticeship ; Partnerships with John
Harrison and Thomas Wkieldon.
Josiah, the thirteenth and youngest child of Thomas and Mary
Wedgwood, was baptised in the parish church of Burslem, Staffordshire,
on the 1 2th of July, 1730
(old style). He came of a race of potters
who for several generations had been exercising their ancient and useful
craft in the district of
"
The Potteries." His parents were neither poor nor
rich : many of his relatives were in prosperous circumstances
;
some might
be called comparatively wealthy, and occupied important and honourable
positions. The boy went first to a dame's school
;
afterwards, when about
seven years old, he attended as a day-scholar a school kept by one Blunt,
in a large half-timbered house situated in the market-place of the neigh-
bouring town of Newcastle-under-Lyme. This schoolmaster appears
to have been a man of more than ordinary acquirements, not un-
acquainted with the elements of natural science. The biographer of
Wedgwood, the late Miss Meteyard, tells us, I know not on what
authority, that the young Josiah was an adept in the art of cutting out
with scissors designs in paper. These represented
"
an army at combat, a
fleet at sea, a house and garden, or a whole potworks and the shapes of
the ware made in it. These cuttings when wetted were stuck along the
whole length of the sloping desks, to the exquisite delight of the
scholars, but often to the great wrath of the severe pedagogue." It is to
be hoped that this tale is true, and that we have here a significant indi-
cation and presage of the artistic capacity which reached so high a degree
of development in subsequent years. Another tradition recorded by the
same writer points in a similar direction. For it seems that the boy in
12
JOSIAH WEDGWOOD
very early yearshe must have been at the time under ninebegan to
collect curious and beautiful things, commencing a kind of small museum
in one of his father's work-sheds, and loading its shelves with fossils and
minerals from the neighbourhood. This tradition is the more reasonable
since we know that in after-life Wedgwood became an ardent collector of
shells, both recent and fossil, as well as of other objects of natural history.
In the summer of
1739,
before he had quite completed his ninth year,
Josiah Wedgwood lost his father, who died, after a short illness, at the
age of fifty-two. At this early age Josiah Wedgwood was removed from
school and began the work of a practical potter in the factory of his
eldest brother Thomas, to whom the patrimony of his father had been
bequeathed. Here his nicety of eye and dexterity of hand served him
in good stead, so that he soon became an expert
"
thrower
"
on the wheel.
After the lapse of about two years he was attacked by small-pox, which
assumed a virulent form, and greatly enfeebled him for some time, more
particularly affecting his right knee. However, when Josiah was in his
fifteenth year he was bound apprentice to his brother Thomas for a term
of five years, dating from the eleventh of November,
1744.
Unfor-
tunately, as it seemed at the time, he was soon compelled by the return
of the weakness in his right knee to abandon the thrower's bench and to
turn his attention in other directions. This necessary change in the
character of Josiah's employment may not have been without its advan-
tages, and probably gave the youthful potter a wider insight into the
practical requirements of his craft, and familiarised him with the various
separate departments of the works. At this time he was engaged in
"
moulding," and in the making, by the association of variously-coloured
clays, of imitations of banded and streaked agate, in the form of knife-
hafts and snuff-boxes
;
these were afterwards mounted by the cutlers and
hardwaremen of Sheffield and Birmingham. Towards the close of his
apprenticeship Josiah seems to have developed a strong tendency to
original experiment. In this direction he met with no sympathy from
his master and eldest brother, who refused his proposal, when the term
of his indentures was over, to take him into partnership. Josiah then
agreed to a proposal made by John Harrison, a tradesman of Newcastle,
who, though apparently ignorant of the potter's craft, had invested money
in the factory of Thomas Alders, of Cliff Bank, near Stoke. Thus it
Fig. I.
granite,
speckled with red, grey, white, and black
;
serpentine, with mottlings of
3o
JOSIAH WEDGWOOD
green, grey, and yellow
;
antique yellow, saffron veined with black
;
also, Egyptian pebble, jasper, porphyry, and several kinds of agate.
Under the designations, Rosso antico, cane-colour, and bamboo,
Wedgwood included a
number of bodies which
would now be called terra
cotta. They had a dead,
dry surface, and so dif-
fered from the black ba-
salt as to be distinctly por-
ous. They varied much
iii hue, but their names
afford a good indication
of the range of colour
which they present. Two
varieties of these terra
cottas were sometimes as-
sociated in the same piece,
the body being in one
colour, the reliefs in
another. Moreover these
bodies were sometimes
used in conjunction with
the black basalt : some-
times they were decorated
with reliefs in white paste.
The red terra cotta was
occasionally made of a
pale tint
;
a chocolate hue
is also known (see Fig.
7).
Red reliefs on black basalt,
white on chocolate, pur-
plish black on white, and
dull sage green on cane-
colour, afforded satisfactory contrasts or harmonies. Some of these
terra cotta pastes, such as the white and green above named, were
Fig. 6.
JOSIAH
WEDGWOOD
33
"
saccharoid," to borrow a geological termin appearance and rough
to the finger: it needs to be rubbed down with fine emery before
it can be made to pass successfully this test of touch. Though
generally left with its natural matt or nearly matt surface the
jasper ware is susceptible of a fine polish. Wedgwood occasionally
polished the grounds and bevelled edges of some of his smaller cameos
and intaglios, particularly in his more direct imitations of natural
stratified stones: examples of polished edges are furnished by the
two specimens figured on Plate III., and by the bevel (showing three
strata) of the Medusa plaque (Fig. 8).
The inside of tea-cups,
bowls, and salt-cellars was also frequently ground and polished on
the lathe.
The peculiarity in chemical composition which marks out the
jasper-ware body from all other ceramic pastes was brought about by
the introduction of a compound of the element barium. This
metal occurs in nature chiefly in the form of sulphate, the mineral,
which is found abundantly in Derbyshire, being known as cawk,
heavy-spar, and barytes. The distinctive character of the alkaline
earth contained in heavy-spar seems to have been first ascertained by
Guyton de Morveau in
1779:
four years afterwards Withering
recognised the same earth in a mineral carbonate, from Leadhills
in Lanarkshire, now called Witherite. But as early as the year
1773
Wedgwood was making experiments with these two minerals. The
chemical knowledge of his day was, however, too imperfect to be
of great use to the inquiring potter, who was obviously much puzzled
by the apparently capricious behaviour of the two compounds under
the action of fire. In
1774
he wrote to his partner Bentley, "I must
go into Derbyshire to search for spath fusible or No.
19
:"
not long
afterwards he made the journey thither and found what he required.
Wedgwood's keen observation and his untiring assiduity in experiment
were soon rewarded. He had learnt the chief properties, as constituents
of his new jasper-ware, of the sulphate of baryta or cawk and of
the rather more fusible carbonate, although we possess no evidence
of his having discovered the differences in their chemical composition.
Henceforth cawk became the chief ingredient of his
"
jasper," although a
small quantity of the carbonate of baryta was occasionally introduced as
34
JOSIAH WEDGWOOD
well. The other materials were clay and finely-ground flint.
x
He tried
several kinds of clay such as Weal blue clay, Dorset clay, and Cornish
China-clay. He also used Cornish or China stone which contains a
notable proportion of felspar. Wedgwood wrote to his partner in
somewhat enigmatical terms when indicating the ingredients of his
jasper-body, saying that its composition was
"
too precious to reveal
all at once." One of his formula;, when translated into percentages,
is probably pretty nearly represented by these figuressulphate of
baryta,
59
parts; clay,
29;
flint, 10; carbonate of baryta, 2.
One of the chief charms of jasper-ware consists in the daintiness of
its colour. Besides several tones and hues of blue derived from cobalt,
we meet with a yellow, a lilac, and a green jasper
;
there is also a black
variety. Each of these colours occurs in several modifications. The
black is sometimes bluish, sometimes neutral : the green, which was
derived from chromium, though always toned with some grey, exhibits
many different hues, ranging from yellowish-green to bluish-green
; the
lilac, due to manganese, varies generally between a pink and a pale pur-
ple, but occasionally presents the precise hue of a mixture of cocoa-infusion
and milk
;
and the yellow is slightly greyish, with a tendency towards
an amber hue in some examples
;
in other pieces it approaches the colour
of the lemon, while some varieties mav be called buff. As a rule
Wedgwood limited himself to the association, in any single production of
his kiln, of no more than two of the above colours, with the addition of
white
;
the least happy in effect of these combinations are those in which
blue and yellow occur alone, unaccompanied by white.
Jasper-ware was made in two ways. In one process the entire sub-
stance was coloured by the metallic oxide used ;
in the other, the surface
only was stained. The former method yielded the product known as
"
solid jasper," the latter gave the
"
jasper-dip
"
by
it the most
delicate and refined effects were produced. This jasper-dip was invented
in
1777,
really in order to economise the costly oxide of cobalt. During
the partnership with Bentley, the solid jasper was, however, chiefly em-
ployed. But at the time of Bentley's death in 1780, and for the next
1
The useful fireproof cement lately introduced into commerce under the name
"
Purimachos
"
consists of the same ingredients, the clay being in smallest proportion.
Some of Wedgwood's chemical vessels approach it very closely in composition.
JOSIAH WEDGWOOD
3S
fifteen years, Wedgwood produced the great majority of his larger
ornamental pieces in jasper-dip. It is, however, to be noted that the two
methods of manufacture were often associated in the same object. Thus,
in the beautiful coloured chequered work which we find on some of the
vases, flowerpots, and dejeuner sets of what we may call the period
of
perfection, (1781
to
1795),
tne ^tle quatrefoils applied to the surface are
of solid jasper, while the coloured squares are of jasper-dip. A
troublesome defect in both methods ought not to be passed over. The
facility with which the white jasper-body became tinctured with the
colours imparted by various metallic oxides very frequently caused the
thinner parts of the white reliefs to acquire a stain from the coloured
surface below them. This discoloration is rarely absent from the edges
of the white reliefs on a black ground, which frequently present a dirty-
yellow hue.
CHAPTER VI
THE BARBERINI OR PORTLAND VASE
Modelledfrom the Original by Henry Webber ; Discovery
of
the Vase, its Date, Decoration
and Material ; Prices realised by Wedgwooa's Copies
The name of Wedgwood is inseparably connected with that
remarkable glass amphora commonly called the
"
Portland Vase
: '"
the
best of his copies, such as that reproduced in Plate I, challenge comparison
with the original. That Wedgwood should have succeeded in translating
the light-and-colour effects of a glass cameo into another material
indicates how complete was his control of the "jasper-body," and how
efficient was the aid which the modellers employed upon the task rendered
him in this critical case. It is somewhat strange to find that Flaxman
does not appear to have taken any part in this work, although Sir
W. Hamilton had written to Wedgwood saying,
"
I should have thought
my friend Flaxman would have been of use to you in your present
undertaking
;
for I must do him the justice to say, I never saw a bas-
relief executed in the true simple antique style half so well as that he did
of the Apotheosis of Homer from one of my vases." According to
Miss Meteyard {Handbook, pages
297-9),
the work connected with
the copying of the designs on the vase was done chiefly in London,
although several of Wedgwood's own modellersHenry Webber,
1
William Hackwood, William Wood, and otherswere engaged upon
it. The same authority also states that the original was not sent down to
Etruria until December 22, 1790,
more than four years after it had
been entrusted to the care of Wedgwood. It is difficult to reconcile
this statement with othersin Miss Meteyard's Handbooksuch as
1
An excellent modeller, recommended to Wedgwood by Sir Joshua Reynolds and
Sir William Chambers.
JOSIAH
WEDGWOOD
37
this one, that in October,
1789,
a perfect copy had been made, and
with one's conviction that such a potter must have had the vase
always at hand during his laborious efforts in preparing suitable
colours and bodies wherewith to reproduce it. For it must be
remembered that the original material is a very dark blue glass, over
which was a layer of nearly opaque white glass, out of which the cameo
figures in relief were cut. On the other hand, Wedgwood had to
make his copies in a blue-black jasper-body
;
to this the moulded reliefs
in white jasper were affixed, but the variations observable in different
specimens show that much surface-modelling must have been executed
by hand after the reliefs had left the mould, and before the object
was fired. It should be stated in this connection that Wedgwood
altered slightly some of the minor details of the designs on this vase,
and restored the parts which had been corroded.
The modern history of the Portland Vase, although it has been often
given, is so interesting as to bear repetition here. A few words may
not inappropriately be prefixed in correction of some of the views as to
its date and subject entertained by writers on Wedgwood ware. It is
now generally admitted by experts that this remarkable example of
cameo-cutting belongs to the closing years of the Roman Republic,
or at least cannot be of later date than the first century of the Imperial
Principate. Diverse interpretations of the two scenes depicted on the
vase have been offered, but it is most probable that they illustrate
episodes in the courtship of Peleus and Thetis, their meeting on Mount
Pelion being depicted in one group, and in the other the consent of
Thetis to be the bride of Peleus, Poseidon and Eros being present.
The youthful bust on the base of the vase represents Paris wearing
a Phrygian cap, and heavily draped. It is a separate work, and
formed no part of the original design.
Until the acquisition of the vase by the Duchess of Portland in
the year
1785
it was known as the Barberini Vase, for it was discovered
between the years 1623 and
1644,
during the Pontificate of Urban VIII.,
Maffeo Barberini. This Pope had ordered the sepulchral mound called
Monte de Grano, situated at a spot on the road to Frascati about two
and a-half miles from Rome, to be excavated. In a marble sarcophagus
of the early part of the third century of our era the vase was found
;
38 JOSIAH WEDGWOOD
it was subsequently placed in the Barberini Palace in Rome. Sir W.
Hamilton bought it (about the year
1782)
for 1,000. He sold it
to the Duchess of Portland in
1785
: after her death the Duke of
Portland purchased it for
1,029 ;
he lent it to Wedgwood. In 18 10
the fourth Duke deposited it on loan in the British Museum. On
the 7th of February,
1845,
William Lloyd, a scene-painter, wantonly
broke it into many fragments. These were put together without much
adroitness, the bottom was not replaced : the restored vase may be
seen in the Gem and Gold Ornaments Room. The above-mentioned
sarcophagus is now in the Museum of the Capitol in Rome. The reliefs
on its sides, representing stories from the life of Achilles, furnished
Wedgwood with materials for two of his largest and finest plaques,
the
"
Sacrifice of Iphigenia," and
"
Priam begging the Body of Hector
from Achilles." These subjects were taken, with some modifications, from
the reliefs on the front and back of this sarcophagus : the sculptures on
the two ends, representing groups of warriors, were also employed in
the same way. The whole set of designs appears to have been modelled
by the Italian sculptor Pacetti, who worked at Rome for Wedgwood
under Flaxman's superintendence. Some additional particulars with
regard to the plaque of the Sacrifice of Iphigenia (Plate II.) will be
found in the next chapter.
It was Wedgwood's intention to produce fifty proofs (for so we
may call the early copies) of his reproduction of the Portland Vase
;
we do not know whether this intention was fulfilled. About twenty
of these old examples of the first issue have been recognised in various
public and private collections. Nearly all approach very closely the
dimensions of the original, which is
10^ inches high, but differ from
each other in the quality of the black ground, and in the tint,
the degree of opacity, and the refinement of the white reliefs.
At the beginning of the present century, a few years after Wedgwood's
death, more copies of the vase were made, but we are inclined to
think that none of them is equal to those of the first issue.
It has also been produced in smaller sizes and in other materials
;
while Wedgwood's many imitators copied, though with very moderate
success, this conspicuous triumph of his skill. Wedgwood charged
fifty pounds for some of his copies of the Portland Vase
;
for other
JOSIAH WEDGWOOD
39
examples, which were flawed or which did not entirely satisfy his
critical eye, he seems to have been content with a smaller price. The
sums which early specimens have brought by auction have increased
a good deai during the last half-century. In
1849
the copy in the
Tulle Collection was bought in for .20 ;
that belonging to Samuel
Rogers sold for fifty guineas in the year 1856 ;
the copy in the
Purnell Collection fetched no less than
iJ2
when that remarkable
assemblage of works of art was dispersed at Sotheby's in the year
1872. A good early copy sold at Christie's in 1890 for
199
10s :
it was in the collection of Mr. Cornelius Cox. The example in the
Museum of Practical Geology in Jermyn Street was originally bought
(in
1793)
by Dr. R. W. Darwin, of Shrewsbury
;
that in the British
Museum is one of the first subscription copies : in the South Kensington
there is a specimen from the Jones Bequest. That which is reproduced
in Plate I., from Mr.
J.
L. Propert's Collection, is of unrivalled quality.
The ground is rather lustrous and of a most unusual colour, not
exactly black, but an extremely dark slate hue. The highest price
yet realised for a copy of this vase was
215
$s.
;
this was in
1892,
at the dispersal of the choice series of works by Wedgwood belonging
to the late Mr. W. Durning Holt.
In a strict chronological discussion of Wedgwood's labours his
reproduction of the Portland Vase should have been described in a
later chapter, but the fame and importance of this work seemed to
demand a separate and early treatment of the subject.
CHAPTER VII
HIS CAMEOS, MEDALLIONS, JND PLAQUES
Early Trials in Colour ; Cameos and Intaglios in Semi- Porcelain and Black Basalt ; Cameos
and Medallions in the "Jasper- Body ; Plaques and Tablets ; Important examples
During Wedgwood's lifetime, in the sixth and last English edition
of his Catalogue, Class I. of his productions consists of two sections.
The first of these is described as containing
"
Small Cameos from
Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and Antique Gems.
637
subjects." In the
second section are included "Intaglios or Seals.
391
subjects." In
the first edition of the Catalogue
(1773)
the Cameos and Intaglios
were grouped together, and numbered in all
285
only. As time went
on Wedgwood not merely increased the number and variety of his
productions of this class, but endeavoured to attain a higher degree
of perfection in material and workmanship. He tells us that his
cameos were made for two purposes, some to serve as ornaments, the
rest to be gathered into cabinets in order to illustrate mythology or
history : this remark applied, doubtless, not only to the works com-
prised in Class I., but also to the cameos of the nine succeeding
classes.
Amongst the most instructive specimens of the early cameos are
a number of trial-pieces made of a cream-coloured paste or a greyish-
white semi-porcelain, but having their grounds washed or painted
with enamel colours or stains. The colours are olive-green, blue, dull
pink, ochre-yellow, lavender, brick-red, chocolate, and black
;
in
most cases the surface is glossy and uneven, while the colour is not
brought accurately up to the contours of the relief-head. The small
uncoloured semi-porcelain cameos lack sharpness, and they were not
improved by the addition of coloured grounds. Still these first experi-
JOSIAH WEDGWOOD
41
ments of Wedgwood prepared the way for his subsequent successes,
such as those which are illustrated by the medallions and plaques which
are shown in Plates II. and III., and in the portrait cameos which have
been selected for reproduction in the present paper. It must be owned
that the terra-cotta body and the whitish semi-porcelain employed by
Wedgwood were ill-adapted for the adequate reproduction of the
exquisite workmanship of engraved gemsunder even a very low
magnifying power the serious defects of Wedgwood's materials are
painfully apparent, the results obtained by the use of glass being
immeasurably superior. With the finest varieties of black basalt and
of the jasper-body a nearer approach to the delicacy of the originals
was frequently secured, especially in the case of those objects which
were of considerable size.
Wedgwood's invention of the jasper-body, though not brought to
perfection at one stroke, finally enabled him to produce cameo reliefs on
grounds coloured of almost any hue that might be preferred. As the
whole ground, both that part shown and that covered by the relief, was
coloured either throughout its substance or over its entire surface, there
was no difficulty in securing perfect sharpness and accuracy of contour to
the relief subsequently affixed thereto. This relief had been previously
moulded
;
after its application to the prepared ground it could be, and
often was, worked on by sculptor or modeller, so as to repair defects,
and to do such undercutting as was necessary. Thus it is constantly
observed that the character and merit of individual specimens of cameos
taken fromv the very same mould are widely divergent. Some have not
been touched by the tool, others have been modified by the after-treatment
which they have received at the hands of more or less competent artists.
Attention has already been directed to these points in the chapter on the
Portland Vase. Another operation was not infrequently performed upon
the smaller cameos, especially upon those intended for mounting : even
the larger plaques for fireplaces were occasionally subjected to the same
treatment, which consisted in polishing their edges on the lapidary's
wheel. This at once revealed the fineness of the body, and indicated, even
on a cursory inspection, that the colour of the piece was due, not to an
enamel paint adherent to the surface, but to an intimate union of the
chromatic constituent with the very body of the ground. These
4
2
JOSIAH WEDGWOOD
characteristic qualities are beautifully shown in the case of the cameos
having laminated grounds. Such grounds are made up of two or more
superimposed layers of the ceramic paste, differently coloured. Generally
they consisted of laminae having different tints of blue
;
occasionally a
Fig. 8.Medallion, Head
of
Medusa ; blue and white jasper, laminated ground.
white layer occurs between two coloured layers. The extremely fine
Medusa's Head (Fig.
8),
taken originally from one of the Townley
marbles and modelled by Flaxman, shows by its bevelled and polished
edge that the solid jasper-ground to which the white relief has been
JOSIAH
WEDGWOOD
43
applied is of composite structure, consisting of three layers, the central
one being dark blue, the others considerably lighter. In a few rare
instances, chiefly of cameos for rings and pins, not only was the edge
polished on the wheel, but the entire field also
;
such examples simulate
very closely the appearance of the natural-banded onyx.
In Wedgwood's Catalogue, the sixth edition, published in
1787,
Class II. comprised
275
subjects represented on medallions and tablets,
many of large size. In addition to these, a good many fine plaques
are known which do not appear in any edition of the Catalogues
;
some of them were undoubtedly modelled and issued after
1787.
Amongst them may be named the two large tablets represented
respectively in Plate II. and Fig. 9.
The first of these plaques is
the Sacrifice of Iphigenia, the design having been modelled in Rome,
under the supervision of Flaxman, by the Italian sculptor Pacetti, from
the relief on the front of the sarcophagus in which the Barberini or
Portland Vase was found. This plaque is of large size, fifteen inches
by six. The figures are white, relieved on a delicate greyish-green
ground. So far as material and colour are concerned, this fine cameo
is extremely beautiful. The heads are well modelled, and the expression
of the faces aptly rendered, and if there be some defects in the drawing
and a certain lack of restraint and breadth in the composition, one must
remember that the original sculpture was executed at a time when the
true antique feeling had been in some measure lost. Still, as an
example of the complete command of the potter's art which Wedgwood
had attained, this plaque is exceptionally important. It is interesting
to note that there exists a slightly modified version of it, in which the
nude figures are partially draped
;
the effect is less happy. It was a
copy of this draped version which was sold in 1869 at Christie's for
121 i6j. The specimen from which Plate II. is taken is in the
Jermyn Street Museum. Fig.
9
is another example of Wedgwood's
large jasper tablets, but in this instance the white figures are relieved
on a black ground. This piece belongs to the period when Wedgwood
had just completed his reproduction of the Portland Vase. The plaque
from which the illustration is taken is in the collection of Mr.
J.
L.
Propert. It is the largest known example of a black and white
jasper tablet.
44
JOSIAH WEDGWOOD
An interesting plaque modelled by Flaxman represents the conclusion
of a commercial treaty between England and France : Mercury joins
the hands of two symbolical figures who stand for the two countries.
It is in very low relief, while the treatment of the draperies is so
simple as to verge upon poverty of expression. It is, however, a
characteristic example of the sculptor, and offers a remarkable contrast
to the florid style of most of Pacetti's work, as illustrated by the
Sacrifice of Iphigenia. Fig. 10 is taken from the example in Mr.
Propert's collection. This work was modelled in 1787.
There is one group of figures produced in cameo form by Wedgwood
which has been more frequently copied and imitated in various com-
binations and in various kinds of ware than any other design. It
consists of three amorini, or rather
"
Bacchanalian Boys," instinct with
life and naiveti. The modeller of the group and the author of
the original drawing was Lady Diana Beauclerk. There is a
particularly fine example in the South Kensington Museum of this
beautiful plaque, the material being black and white jasper (Fig.
11).
It is of the highest quality,texture, tone and modelling being alike
excellent. Bought in the year
1855,
before the period when the
productions of Josiah Wedgwood had regained the appreciation of
connoisseurs, it was acquired for a few shillings. It is worth while
comparing it with the copy made by Josiah Spode a few years sub-
sequently, an example of which will be found on a jug of brown
earthenware in the same museum.
Among the smaller cameos in jasper-dip which belong to a period
subsequent to the year 1780,
when Wedgwood's partner Bentley died,
three examples have been selected for illustration. One of these,
representing Achilles with the body of Hector, is given in Fig. 12.
The specimen in Mr. Propert's collection has the field of an olive-green
hue, while the border is black and white. Some exquisite examples
of these choice tricoloured cameos are met with in cabinets : some were
mounted in gold and set in small toilette and snuff-boxes of ivory.
The subjects vary,Aurora in her chariot, boys at play, and a sale of
amorini being amongst the most frequent. Unfortunately their charms
of colour and of tone do not lend themselves readily to any available
processes of reproduction ;
the originals must be studied. Nor do
<
g
^
5:
5*
On
sb SyeJiJ/ //
'/
.
// t
/r.uhrZjWc,.-*'.
I /fi /'////,rt .
JOSIAH
WEDGWOOD
47
these pieces admit of satisfactory enlargement by photography. For,
as already pointed out in the present chapter, the small and numerous
details of these medallions betray the inadequacy of the granular paste
to represent really minute and fine work directly one attempts to increase
their apparent size. In this respect the jasper-body is greatly inferior
Fig. 10.
Plaque, Treaty between France and England ; blue and white jasper.
to such natural substances as cornelian, sard, amethyst, aquamarine, &c,
which are virtually homogeneous and textureless. The two other
cameos or medallions mentioned in the preceding paragraph are
represented of their original size on Plate III.
;
both are in the
writer's collection. The upper medallion, of white on a rich blue
ground of jasper-dip, is one of a set of four aerial figures with floating
48 JOSIAH WEDGWOOD
draperies and wings of slightly varied design. The colour of the
ground shows slightly through parts of the wings and draperies, and
imparts to them a faintly diaphanous appearance, appropriate enough
to the figure of a zephyr. The lower medallion is as fine a piece
Fig. II.
Medallion, King
of
the Two Sicilies; blue and white jasper.
upon the portrait of Louis XVI. of France, that of
J
B. Nini upon
that of Marie Antoinette. Wedgwood's chief modeller of likenesses,
William Hackwood, doubtless produced a very great number of these
cameos, but very few bear his signature. Amongst these may be
mentioned those of Edward Bourne, Reverend William Willet, and
Voltaire
;
one of the likenesses of Wedgwood, and a third version of
that of George III. But far less incomplete information is available
with regard to the assistance afforded by John Flaxman in this
60
JOSUH WEDGWOOD
department of Wedgwood's productions. To him may be assigned
the following portraits amongst a large number which are also undoubtedly
his work :
Lord Amherst, Sir Joseph Banks, Mrs. Barbauld, T. O.
Bergman, A. K. Boerhaave, Earl of Chatham, Sir William Chambers,
Queen Charlotte, Captain Cook, Dr. Erasmus Darwin, Duchess of
Devonshire, General G. A. Eliott, Dr.
J.
Fothergill, David Garrick,
Fig.^iS.
-Bowl, Ivy festoons ana pendent cameos ; white, green and lilac jasper.
Fig.- 23.Sugar-Basin and Cover, Fine Pattern ;
pale olive and lilac.
JOSIAH WEDGWOOD
73
tulip, and crocus, and for flowering plants, were made in the jasper-body.
Wedgwood's good taste in the matter of decoration was apparent in
these works, for he was careful to select such ornamental motives as
would not clash with nor overpower the foliage and blossoms to be
associated with these vessels. The slight concave curvature which he
Fig. 24.
Pair
of
Candlesticks Children and Trees; blue ana white jasper.
designed after antique patterns are, however, for the most part cabinet
objects, and are not fitted for everyday use.
One word about scent-bottles. These dainty pieces, often with
polished edges and mountings of gold, have always been highly a~>pre-
76 JOSUH WEDGWOOD
ciated. They vary in size and shape, but were generally made in solid
blue jasper with figures or portraits of white in low relief; they some-
times are bordered with conventional designs also in white.
Oviform handles for bell-ropes were made in considerable numbers
and in queen's ware as well as in jasper. They were decorated in
a simple and appropriate manner
;
there is a representative series of
specimens in the Liverpool Museum.
Nothing has been said, for the limitations of space forbid the further
extension of this chapter, of watch-backs, earrings, opera-glass mounts,
and a number of other minor objects of decoration or utility for which
Wedgwood employed with success his beautiful jasper paste.
CHAPTER XI
LATER TEARS
The Brick House ; Marriage ; Partnership with Thomas Wedgwood , Purchase of
the Site
of
"
Etruria" ; Grand Trunk Canal; London Show Room; a Surgical Operation
;
Partnership with Thomas Bentley ; Etruria, the Village, the Works, the. Hall
;
Josiah
Wedgwooa and Richard Champion ; Scientific Work ; Death ; Portraits.
It seemed advisable, on several grounds, to describe in successive
chapters the chief materials and productions of Wedgwood's manufactory,
although this treatment of the subject involved a long break in our
brief narrative of the potter's life. This we may now resume by
mentioning that at least as early as the year
1762, about three years
after his first start as an independent manufacturer, Wedgwood, finding
it necessary to occupy larger premises than heretofore, rented the Brick
House and Works in Burslem, which he retained until his final and
complete removal to Etruria in
1773.
To the dwelling-house attached
to these potworks, Wedgwood brought his bride, Sarah Wedgwood,
a cousin, the daughter of Richard Wedgwood, of Spen Green. The
wedding took place on the 25th January, 1764,
in the parish church
of Astbury, Cheshire. This marriage was altogether happy, Mrs.
Wedgwood fully sympathising with her husband's varied tastes, em-
ployments, and aspirations, and yet devoting herself with exemplary
diligence to all domestic and maternal duties. Their direct descendants
during the last one hundred years have continued the labours which the
death of Josiah Wedgwood in
1795
mign
t
nave interrupted.
The year 1766 was marked by the partnership then arranged
between Josiah Wedgwood and his cousin Thomas, who had been
employed in the works since
1759.
As before mentioned he had been
previously engaged at the Worcester china factory
;
he was a skilful
potter, and became superintendent of the department of the
"
useful
7
8
JOSUH
WEDGWOOD
works
"
both at Burslem and afterwards at Etruria. This partnership
was dissolved only by the death of Thomas Wedgwood in 1788. In
the same year, 1766,
Wedgwood succeeded in acquiring a suitable site
in the neighbourhood of Burslem for a new factory and dwelling-house.
He says in a letter to Bentley, under the date July 18, "I have now
bought the estate I mentioned to you, for which I am to pay
3,000
at Michaelmas next." Subsequently he acquired from another land-
owner a considerable addition to his domain, so that its area sufficed not
only for the erection of a village for his workmen, and an extensive
potworks, furnished with many new and costly appliances, but also for a
mansion for himself surrounded by spacious grounds, as well as a good
house for his partner Bentley. It must indeed have been a prosperous
business which Wedgwood had created, for it to have yielded him, in
the brief space of ten years, the large profits necessary to carry out
the immense undertaking which he had now commenced. For three
years after his purchase of the " Ridge House
" Estate, his new
Etruria Works were opened. The formal inauguration took place
on June
13th, 1769,
Wedgwood himself "throwing" on the wheel the
first six vases. Some of these are still preserved. They are of black
basalt, painted with figures in the antique style in two tones of red,
and bear the legend
"
Artes Etruriae Renascuntur." In form, and in
the finish of their encaustic decoration they were greatly improved upon
in the course of a year or two, but they are of considerable interest as
being
almost the only dated specimens of Wedgwood's time still extant
;
they
consequently serve to fix the period in which more advanced
work of the same character and material was produced at Etruria.
Wedgwood at the time of his commencement of his new works
at Etruria was busy also in furthering the facilities of water carriage
in his district. His sound sense and foresight had been of great
service in settling the plans of certain sections of the Grand Trunk
Canal in the year
1765,
when his knowledge of the requirements of
the district of the Potteries had proved extremely useful to the Duke
of
Bridgewater's
engineer James
Brindley. Mr. Bentley and Dr. Darwin
were also both in consultation on this matter with Wedgwood, whose
promptitude in proving the weakness of rival schemes, and judicious
advocacy in influential quarters of the plan finally adopted, were
JOSIAU WEDGWOOD
79
of incalculable value in securing a favourable issue when the Bill for
authorizing the canal was under discussion in Parliament. It is
characteristic of Wedgwood, shrewd man of business though he
was, that he demurred to the prosaic directness of the course of
that part of the canal which passed through his newly acquired
estate. In
1767
he wrote to Bentley, saying, "Mr. Henshall and I
spent yesterday and to-day at Hetruria in setting out the canal
through that district, and on Monday next I shall begin to make
it. The fields are so very level that the canal will run in a straight
line through them, at least so it is set out, for I could not prevail
on that Vandal to give me one line of Grace^he must go the nearest
and best way or Mr. Brindley would go mad."
The variety of important matters which engaged Wedgwood's
attention at this time1767-8was indeed considerable. For besides
the canal and the founding of Etruria, he was endeavouring to secure
an adequate showroom and depot in the Metropolis for his productions.
The room in Charles Street, Grosvenor Square did not allow of
the exhibition of many sets of dinner and dessert services and of vases,
and no one knew better than Wedgwood the importance of space
for the proper display and arrangement of his wares. One likely
house after another was inspected until in August 1768 some premises
at the top of St. Martin's Lane were finally secured at an annual
rent of one hundred guineas. In the midst of all these and many
other occupations Wedgwood become convinced of the necessity of
having his right leg amputated. He foresaw that in superintending
the work in the large establishment which he was about to found at
Etruria the retention of this useless and often painful member would
be a serious encumbrance. On May 28, 1768, the operation was
successfully performed, the patient making a rapid recovery, thanks
in great measure to the assiduous care of his wife, and the cheerful
companionship of his friend Thomas Bentley, who remained with
him until all danger was over. The name of this friend has been
frequently mentioned before in this essay; and it is now time to
give a few particulars concerning one with whom for eighteen of
the most active years of his life Wedgwood was continuously consulting
and corresponding.
80 JOSIAH WEDGWOOD
The first meeting between Josiah Wedgwood and his future friend
and partner Thomas Bentley, took place at Liverpool, in 1762.
Wedgwood had again injured his knee during a journey to that town,
and in consequence placed himself under the care of a very competent
and well-informed surgeon there, Mr. Matthew Turner. The doctor
effected the introduction of the two men
;
henceforward they became
firmly attached friends, serving one another with zeal and in many
different ways. They were nearly of the same age
;
in love for art, in
business capacity, and in their generosity and public spirit, they had many
characteristics in common. Bentley possessed accomplishments which the
somewhat untoward circumstances in which Wedgwood's early years were
passed had prevented him from acquiring. He had spent some time
on the Continent and spoke fluently both French and Italian, and was a
fair classical scholar. His house in Liverpool became the meeting-place
of many distinguished scientific and literary men, while his polished
manners and his deep and intelligent interest in the public questions of
the day brought him into contact with a large number of the conspicuous
and wealthy men of the district. Thomas Bentley was in no way
connected, so far at least as has been ascertained, with the famous critic
Richard Bentley, who was sixty-nine years old when Wedgwood's future
partner was born. Bentley introduced Wedgwood to many of his friends,
including Dr. Priestley, the celebrated discoverer of oxygen, Dr. Aikin,
and a number of ingenious persons engaged in various kinds of literary,
scientific, and artistic labours. Some were surveyors, engineers and
mechanicians ;
some painters and engravers
;
of their talents in not a few
instances, Wedgwood, in after years, made good use. Bentley was a
merchant and warehouseman in an extensive way of business, and in this
capacity also his association with Wedgwood exercised a considerable
influence upon the growing prosperity of the master-potter. Negotia-
tions for a partnership between them were opened by Wedgwood in 1766,
but it was not until November
14, 1768,
that the arrangements were
finally completed, Bentley acquiring an equal share in the profits arising
from the sale of ornamental as distinguished from useful ware. On
articles belonging to the former class the stamp impressed bore the names
"
Wedgwood and Bentley,' sometimes abbreviated into
"
W. and B.," but
occasionally
altogether omitted. Bentley left Liverpool, though not
JOSIAH
IVEDGIVOOD 81
finally, in
1768,
and occasionally resided in the Brick House at Burslem,
a dwelling attached to one of the factories then occupied by Wedgwood.
A residence was being built for him at this time close to the new
potworks of Etruria, but the greatly increased demand for ornamental
vases of Wedgwood's make compelled him to change his plans, and to
migrate to London, where he established himself in rooms over the
warehouse rented by Wedgwood in Newport Street. Another move
soon followed. A house and garden at Chelsea were obtained on lease
dated 22nd of September, 1669,
the year in which the original China works
there were sold to William Duesbury of Derby. Here Bentley took up his
quarters, which were conveniently situated, for they enabled him to super-
intend the enamelling branch of the factory, which had been for some
time conducted in the inconvenient premises of Newport Street, but was
now to be better housed at Chelsea. The tenure of these Chelsea
premises did not last long, for in
1774
Bentley removed his family and the
enamelling business to Greek Street, Soho. Many of the letters written
by Wedgwood to Bentley are preserved ;
selections from this interesting
correspondence have been printed by Miss Meteyard in her
"
Life of
Wedgwood." Bentley died on the 26th of November, 1780, to the
great sorrow of his friend and partner. He was buried in Chiswick
Church, where there is a monument to his memory by Scheemakers.
The inscription which it bears, though somewhat rhetorical and exag-
gerated in expression, offers a warm and well-deserved tribute to his high
qualities of head and heart.
The death of Bentley was felt acutely by his surviving friend and
partner. But Wedgwood continued his work with unabated industry
and enthusiasm, losing no opportunity to extend his business and to
develop at the same time the perfection and artistic merit of his manu-
facture. It has already been pointed out that the production of vases
in the jasper body was subsequent to the death of Bentley, and that
many of the most beautiful medallions and plaques, more particularly
those in jasper dip, were made between the years 178 1 and
1795.
^et
it must be borne in mind that not only were a vast number and great
variety of fine things in variegated and black ware made during the
term of the partnership, but that the splendid suites of mantelpiece
plaques originated during the same period. We are able to fix the
F
82 JOSIAH WEDGWOOD
dates of some of these sets, partly by means of the extant invoices of
the modellers and other artists employed, partly by the entries in the
sale catalogue of 1781, and by those in the several editions of the
firm's own catalogue published during Bentley's lifetime, and partly by
actual examples of these suites known to have been made in particular
years. Thus there are in Mr. F. Rathbone's gallery two white marble
mantelpieces made for Longton Hall, one in
1777
and the other two
years after. The first of these has as a central ornament, the fine design
by Flaxman representing the Apotheosis of Virgil : on either side of
this are two decorative plaques forming the frieze
;
the blocks at either
end are heads of Medusa, while the jambs are ornamented with two
important plaques representing trophies and altars. The later mantel-
piece has a large central circular medalliona profile headof Ceres,
while the other plaques bear designs of corn and conventional ornament.
All these pieces are wrought in solid blue and white jasper of fine quality.
The catalogues issued by Wedgwood and Bentley have just been named
;
they were drawn up by Bentley and revised by his partner. The first
appeared in
1773,
the second in
1774,
the third was a translation into
French of the second, the fourth was published in
1777,
and the fifth in
English and a sixth in French in
1779.
Bentley wrote the introduction
to the first edition and also the various modifications and numerous
additions which appeared in the subsequent issues. One edition only,
that of
1787,
was published after Bentley's death. It should be added,
in order to show the Continental development of the business, that the
catalogue was published in Dutch in the year
1778
at Amsterdam, and
that in the following year it appeared in a German dress at Leipsic. The
wide distribution in Europe of the productions of Etruria at this time
may be learnt from the numerous specimens bearing the stamp of
Wedgwood and Bentley which have been recognised in many Continental
cities by English travellers. The writer, for instance, discovered many
of the variegated or "pebble" vases in the Natural History Museum
of the Florence University.
Something has already been said as to the founding of the
Staffordshire Etruria. The village, if such it can be called, does not
now present, it must be owned, a very pleasing aspect, but as its
population has been gradually increasing since Wedgwood's day, and now
JOSIAH WEDGWOOD 83
reaches the respectable total of
5,300,
it must be regarded as a flourishing
colony. The potworks remain, so far as outward appearance goes, in
much the same state as when first erected. This cannot be said of
Wedgwood's residence, Etruria Hall. In 1884 after a recent visit of
inspection, I wrote of it in the following words :
"
The house has an
air of faded magnificence, in spite of neglect, the dinginess of its
surroundings, and the smoke-smitten trees hard by." The destruction
of vegetation, which imparts so dreary and forlorn an appearance to the
neighbourhood, is due not so much to the smoke of the potworks, but
to the noxious gases emitted from the neighbouring bar-iron furnaces
of Lord Granville. On penetrating to the cellars of the mansion I had
no difficulty in discovering some of the appliances and receptacles, for
his secret preparations, used by Josiah Wedgwood. For here rather
than in the works he was continually experimenting, in order to effect
the improvement of his ceramic pastes, glazes and pigments, away from
the too curious eyes of visitors or workmen ; and here his secretary
and- assistant, Alexander Chisholm, was in frequent attendance.
It is impossible, in a condensed account such as that now offered,
to describe even a few of the important orders which Wedgwood
executed at the Etruria Works for royal, distinguished or wealthy
patrons. A word however must be said concerning the celebrated
service made for the Empress of Russia, Catherine II. This was shown
in the summer of
1774
in the new Greek Street rooms. Mrs. Delany
wrote about it, saying,
"
there are three rooms below and two above
filled with it, laid out on tables, everything that can be wanted to serve
a dinner; the ground, the common ware pale brimstone, the drawings
in purple, the borders a wreath of leaves, the middle of each piece a
particular view of all the remarkable places in the King's dominions."
The service (or rather the services, for there were two) consisted of
952
pieces. Their cost as plain cream-coloured ware previous to
decoration was no more than
51
%s. ^d. The mere enamel-painting
of the views and borders entailed an expenditure of more than
^2,200.
Some duplicate specimens of plates and cups belonging to this service
still remain in England, and though well and elaborately decorated
they cannot be said to be wholly satisfactory. This was the fault, not
of the potters and painters, but of the conditions imposed by the
f 2
84 J0S1AH WEDGWOOD
Imperial patron. There is an incongruity in the notion of cutting
up your slice of mutton on a charming landscape, and helping a
mediaeval castle to a spoonful of mashed potato ! The Empress kept
this service at her country retreat of La Grenouilliere, where it was seen
by Lord Malmesbury in
1779.
When during his later years Wedgwood had become not only
very prosperous but had acquired considerable wealth, his generous and
public spirit prompted him to employ much of his riches in furthering
wise schemes of benevolence and general utility. All through his
life, as means and opportunities allowed, generosity was a marked
characteristic of the man. In two particulars, however, his conduct
seems open to some degree of censure. For he endeavoured to
prevent the modellers and artists whom he employed from acquiring
any honour from their labours, not permitting them to affix their
names to the products of their skill : and he opposed Richard
Champion of Bristol in his attempts to secure some slight pecuniary
reward for his laborious and skilful trials in the manufacture of true
porcelain just at the time when he was on the point of making
his admirable productions a commercial success. One would like
to think that it was sheer ignorance of the facts rather than prejudice
and self-interest which induced Wedgwood to write to Bentley thus
in 1777:
fe. jggjP
^jjjjjpP'^^^ .
,-^^^w^
nihrir*
J
fdg
*
f . v. t ^V
***'
:
-
'-' ' *
&*-
Fig. 28.
Statuette, seated
figure,
in right hand a syrinx ; terra-cotta.
quality; much work in the same material is also due to the successors
of Adams. The blue and white cameos made at Sevres in imitation of
Wedgwood's jasper are often good, but they are of biscuit porcelain.
96 JOSIAH WEDGWOOD
Palmer, of Hanley, was an unscrupulous imitator of Wedgwood's seals
and vases, and occasionally forged the mark
"
Wedgwood and Bentley."
He and a potter of the name of Neale also imitated the encaustic-
painted vases of Wedgwood. Elijah Mayer, of Hanley, produced many
good pieces in the style of Wedgwood and in various bodies. A dozen
other Staffordshire potters, belonging to the last quarter of the eighteenth
century and the first quarter of the nineteenth, might be named as having
worked under the direct influence of the inventions and improvements
introduced by Josiah Wedgwood.
List of the chief modern Artists whose designs or models
were used by wedgwood.
(Dates in brackets refer to years in which the several artists are known to have been working
for
Wedgwood.)
Angelini (Rome,
1787).
Landre, Mrs.
(1769, 1774).
Astle, Thomas
; 1735-1803. Le Brun, C; 1619-1690.
Bacon, John ; 1740-1799. Lochee, John Charles
; (1787).
Barret, George
; 1732-1784. Mangiarotti (Rome,
1787).
Beauclerk, Lady Diana ; 1734-1808. Manzolini (Rome,
1787).
Burch, Edward
; (1772).
Nini, Jean Baptiste
; 1 7 16-1786.
Coward, John (1768).
Pacetti (Rome,
1787).
Dalmazzoni, Angelo (Rome, Parker, Theodore
(1769).
1787-1795).
Pingo, T.
(1769).
Dassier, John ; 167
6-
1763.
Reynolds, Sir Joshua ; 1 723-1 792.
Davaere or Devere, John (Rome, Roubiliac, L. F.
;
1
695-1
762.
1788-1794).
Stothard, Thomas
; 1755-1834.
Flaxman, John ; 1755-1826.
Stubbs, George
;
1724-1806.
Fratoddi (Rome,
1787).
Tassie, James; 1 735-1 799-
Gosset, Isaac
; 1713-1799.
Tebo
(1775).
Gosset, Matthew
; 1683-1744. Templeton, Lady
(1783).
Grant, B., and Hoskins, James Smith, Joachim
(1773-1775).
(1774).
Steel, Aaron
(1784).
Greatbach, William. Webber, Henry (Etruria, 1782).
Hackwood, William
(1770).
Wilcox, Mrs.
(1
769-1 776).
Amongst other names of painters, designers, and modellers which
might have been included in the above list are those of Boot, Miss
Crewe, Denby, Holinshed, Keeling, Richard Parker, P. Stephan, Ralph
Unwin, and Edward Watson. In a considerable number of cases, extant
productions of Wedgwood's factory can be definitely assigned to many
of the artists whose names are here recorded.
CHAPTER XIII
COLLECTIONS AND COLLECTORS
Provincial Museums ; Public Collections in London ; Formation and Dispersal
of
Private
Collections ; Criteria
of
Quality and Date ; Marks
However small a collection of English pottery may be it generally
includes a few examples of Wedgwood's productions. But it will be
easily understood that a few examples cannot suffice to adequately
represent the amazing variety of work which was turned out from the
kilns of the great potter. Very few collections, public or private, have
been formed in pursuance of a definite plan ; indeed, at the present
day it would not be possible to obtain by purchase anything like
a complete representative series of Josiah Wedgwood's productions.
There are several distinct types, as to form, though not of material,
which are now known only from his catalogues or his manuscript papers.
And then, too, of his largest and most important plaques and vases very
few examples exist, so that years may elapse without one of these rare
pieces coming into the market. Josiah Wedgwood himself found, when
too late, that it was impossible to make up a complete set of his own
works.
None of our national museums possesses a really representative
collection of the works of Wedgwood. Several provincial towns how-
ever are richer in this respect than London. Liverpool with the Mayer
collection, and Birmingham with the interesting series of specimens
gathered and presented by Messrs. R. and G. Tangye are far ahead of
the metropolis. Fortunately Burslem itself, as the central town of the
Staffordshire potteries, contains the Wedgwood Memorial Institute, in
which is preserved a really fine assemblage of the productions of the
great potter. This collection is due to the munificence of Mr. Thomas
G
98
JOSIAH WEDGWOOD
Hulme, who has formed it by means of judicious selections from all the
recent sales of examples of the old period of the Etruria manufactory.
Other specimens will be found in the two pottery towns of Stoke and
Hanley ; although in the Mechanics' Institute of Hanley and the Free
Public Library of Stoke the productions of the predecessors and con-
temporaries of Wedgwood are far more fully represented than are those
of the master. The Castle Museum at Nottingham has been recently
enriched with the fine collection of the late Mr. Felix Joseph; some
specimens will be found in the Art Museums of Edinburgh and
Glasgow, and in the Science and Art Museum at Dublin.
The three metropolitan public collections of Wedgwood are those in
the British Museum, the South Kensington Museum, and the Museum of
Practical Geology in Jermyn Street. Even were they combined into a
single assemblage they would afford a very imperfect notion of the
extensive range of our potter's labours. One would miss examples, or
at least an adequate representation, of entire groups of Wedgwood's
productions, such as of large plaques in black basalt, in white semi-
porcelain, in coloured jasper and in encaustic painted ware, of statuettes,
busts and animals
;
of lamps and candelabra
;
of flower- and root-pots
;
of
cream-coloured services for table use
;
and of ink-vessels, paint-chests,
eye-cups and other objects of domestic and technical utility. I do not
think that too much emphasis can be laid upon the happy manner in
which Wedgwood associated beauty with serviceableness in his different
varieties of useful ware; this characteristic feature cannot be properly
shown by a miscellaneous gathering consisting of a pair of plates from
one service, a dish from another, and a soup-tureen from a third. One
wants in a museum a table equipage, not complete indeed, but
representative. So, also, one would like to see in a public gallery
illustrations of the way in which Wedgwood adapted his productions to
the arts of the jeweller and the architect. His bas-reliefs in various
bodies let into panelled walls, his suites of tablets for the friezes and
jambs of mantelpieces, his large vases and busts for the tops of book-
cases, and his wine coolers for the sideboard, cannot be duly appreciated
when dissociated from their intended surroundings and ranged in crowded
ranks on the shelves of a cabinet. Nor can the artistic effect of
Wedgwood's small and delicate jasper cameos be properly seen when these
JOSIAH WEBGWOOb
99
choice gems are fixed in formal rows upon a museum tablet, instead of
being framed in cut steel, in gold, in silver or in ivory, or set in bon-
bonnieres, tea-caddies and patch-boxes. Our national collections are
therefore not inadequate merely on the score of incompleteness, but also
by reason of their defective arrangement.
During the last forty years or so many private collections of
Wedgwood's productions have been made ; many also have been dispersed.
Specimens of the jasper-body have been more generally sought for than
those made of other and perhaps less choice compositions. Coloured
jasper vases and dejeuner sets as well as cameo medallions and portraits
have mainly engaged the attention of collectors. Black basalt, white
semi-porcelain and white jasper, as well as granite and marbled ware, have
not secured a high place in the esteem of the majority of connoisseurs. A
few collectors have gathered together specimens of table services in
Queen's ware : the delicately tinted dessert dishes, plates, tureens,
compotiers, and bowls, in the form of different species of shells, have
been more highly appreciated than the pieces with enamelled orna-
mental borders of more or less conventional design painted by hand.
The cream-ware decorated with transfer-printed engravings in black, red,
or puce, has perhaps been deemed to be a less characteristic product
of Etruria, since we know that for the most part it was printed and
fired in the kilns of Messrs. Sadler and Green at Liverpool. But
on more careful inquiry it will be found that Wedgwood did not
rest content with the designs purchased from others or made by
Sadler and Green, but was continually furnishing the Liverpool firm
with fresh material obtained by himself and more agreeable to his
own taste. He frequently suggested improvements in style, method,
or colour. As to this last point, that of the harmonious colouring
of his cream-ware, Wedgwood wrote to Green in
1770
(in reference
to designs printed in outline and then filled in with enamels by hand),
urging him to avoid certain crude colours and to adopt a more
sober scale. So that after all no collection of Wedgwood's cream
ware can be considered representative unless it contain a series of
specimens illustrating the salutary influence which the great potter
exercised upon the practice of the art of transfer-printing on earthenware
by Sadler and Green.
ioo
JOSIAH WEDGWOOD
The frequent formation and frequent dispersal of private collections
of the works of Wedgwood during the last five-and-twenty years
has had several different results. Many specimens have found a
final, and we hope secure, resting-place in public museums
;
many
have passed from one private collection to another, then to a third,
and perhaps even to a fourth
;
not a few have been lost sight of,
at least for a time. Another consequence of such changes of
ownership, and of the attention paid to the subject, has been seen
in the searches which have been made for fine examples in every
part of Europe. Not only the shops but the private dwellings of
France, Germany, Italy, Holland and Belgium have been ransacked by
enthusiastic collectors and eager dealers. One hears of a series of
large white and lilac jasper plaques being discovered in a little back
parlour in Venice
;
of a fine cameo of the Medusa's head being
bought for five lire in a broker's shop in a village near Turin
;
of beautiful medallions set as ornaments in furniture, in clocks and
even in doors in a remote French chateau, while some very choice
specimens of the best period of manufacture have returned to the
country that produced them, even from Russia. Wedgwood had
agencies in several important Continental centres, and the distribution
of his ornamental as well as of his useful wares during the last
quarter of the eighteenth century was carried out on an extensive
scale.
During the last twenty or thirty years not only have a large number
of fine specimens of Wedgwood's work formed part of several collections
of works of art and of domestic furniture which have been dispersed by
auction, but there have been sold many inclusive and general gatherings
of pottery as well as of Wedgwood's productions in particular. The
prices obtained on such occasions have fluctuated considerably, but have
as a rule been greatly in advance of those of forty years ago. When
several such sales occur about the same time or at a period of commercial
depression, the prices realised are naturally lowered, especially if it so
happen that the Wedgwood collectors of the day are content with what
they already possess and no new gatherings are being formed. The
priced catalogues of recent auctions are, for these reasons alone, insuffi-
cient guides whereby to judge of the appreciation of the examples sold.
JOSIAH
tVEDGPVOOt) ioi
Moreover, a catalogue affords no adequate indications of quality, for all
old Wedgwood is not necessarily fine. The chief collections dispersed at
Christie's during the last thirty years were these:De La Rue, 1866;
Marryatt,
1867 ;
Barlow,
1869;
Carruthers,
1870;
Bohn,
1875;
Sibson,
1877;
Shadford-Walker,
1885;
Braxton-Hicks, 1887; an<^ Cornelius
Cox, 1890.
At the present time there are many possessors and collectors of old
Wedgwood. Some of them are the owners of hereditary or family
collections, but the majority have formed their own gatherings by recent
purchases. To the former group Sir
J.
D. Hooker and Professor
T. Roger Smith belong; to the latter Mr.
J.
A. Bartlett, Mr. A. W.
Franks, Mr.
J.
L. Propert, Mr. W.
J.
Stuart, Lord Tweedmouth, Mr.
Jeffery Whitehead and Dr. Edgar Willett. The name of the chief
expert in old Wedgwood should be introduced here. Mr. Frederick
Rathbone, of South Kensington, has done more in the way of forming
the best collections made during recent years than any one else, and
a visit to his gallery in Alfred Place West is indeed a treat to the lover
of the ceramic art. For thirty-five years he has enjoyed exceptional
facilities for the acquisition of an intimate knowledge of the work of
the great potter
;
his good taste and critical eye have enabled him to take
full advantage of his opportunities. Having been for some time the
agent and representative in the art department of the firm of Josiah
Wedgwood and Sons, his acquaintance with the modern period of
manufacture has afforded him the means of comparing and contrasting
the new work with the old. His knowledge of marks- -and of the other
criteria by which the good pieces may be recognised has been freely given
to connoisseurs, and I am myself indebted to him for the cuts of the
signatures with which the present chapter concludes. He is at present
engaged in the production of a richly illustrated work on Old Wedgwood
which is being published by Mr. Quaritch.
It is not possible to define precisely in words those special character-
istics by which old and fine Wedgwood may be discriminated from new
or inferior* The senses of touch and sight must be brought into
requisition. Whatever the variety of material, shape, or decoration may
be, there will be apparent a pervading air of lightness with truth of
form and perfect finish. In the case of the jasper-body, flatness and
102 JOSIAH fFEDGfVOOD
smoothness of ground, without ripples, bubbles or stringiness, are marked
features.
The mark on the productions of Wedgwood consisted simply of
the name impressed in the clay in letters of varying size
;
but during
the partnership
(1769- 17 80)
with Bentley the form adopted on the
ornamental ware was
"
Wedgwood & Bentley," with the addition of
"
Etruria " on the basalt, Etruscan, and variegated or pebble vases, and
occasionally on the pedestals of large busts or figures. On the very
small basalt intaglios the initials only,
"
W. & B.", appear. During the
best period of manufacture the impressed marks are sharply defined
;
occasionally genuine old pieces have no stamp. Besides the manu-
facturer's mark, an immense number of supplementary signs, sometimes
impressed, sometimes painted, have been noted
;
Miss Meteyard devotes
fourteen pages of her Handbook to their description
;
they are workmen's
marks, and have little significance
;
in a few instances, however, they
serve to distinguish invariably fine work in the jasper-body. Such is
the case with the letter O and the numeral
3,
which occur, singly or in
association, below the usual Wedgwood stamp.
The following marks are selected from Mr. F. Rathbone's essay
on the subject : they, or some of them, occur on pieces made up
to the time of Wedgwood's death, but the stamp WEDGWOOD
in capital letters has been continuously used at Etruria from
1795
unt;il
the present day.
, , This rare mark is found on an early piece supposed
to have been made by Wedgwood at Burslem.
WEDGWOOD These marks are believed to have been used by
WEDGWOOD \ Wedgwood previous to his partnership with
Wedgwood
Bentley, and afterwards on
"
useful
"
ware.
Wedgwood /
This mark occurs on a wafer or bat of clay affixed
inside the plinths of old basalt vases or the
pedestals of busts.
JOSIAH WEDGWOOD
103
WEDGWOOD
& BENTLEY
WEDGWOOD
& BENTLEY
Wedgwood
& Bentley
Wedgwood
& Bentley
Wedwood
& Bentley
356
ete
w
o
*
'0>
a
.'3u3&
Wedgwood
Wedgwood
Wedgwood
WEDGWOOD
WEDGWOOD
WEDGWOOD
This circular stamp occurs round the screw at the
base of the basalt, granite, and Etruscan vases
The Wedgwood Handbook
1875
Rathbone, F. ;
Loan Exhibition of Old Wedgwood. . . . 1893
The Tangye Collection of Old Wedgwood
Ware at Birmingham 1885
Reeks, T., and Rudler F. W.
;
British Pottery and
Porcelain. 3rd edn 1873
Schreiber, The Lady Charlotte ;
The Schreiber Collection . 1885
Soden-Smith, R. H. ;
English Pottery and Porcelain at the
Alexandra Palace 1873
Ward, John ;
The Borough of Stoke-upon-Trent .... 1843
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