![]() ![]() ![]() He was extraordinarily successful, and in 1783 he said that he had Spreading Kauffman’s fame” (143) and one of the most prolific engravers and publishers of history May have bought some of her etchings after her own designs, sold at her house in Golden Square (151).įor another, at the time that Blake’s father introduced him to the wonderfully fashionableĮngraver William Wynne Ryland as a possible apprentice, “Ryland was the engraver most responsible for Mention as the finest female painter in England and a founder-member of the Royal Academy in 1768 indeed, he For one thing, Angelica Kauffman lived in Golden Square, round the cornerįrom where Blake was born and brought up in Broad Street he probably knew of her as a neighbor, not to ![]() the book is surprisingly illuminating ofīlake’s context and ambitions. ![]() Though William Blake is not referred to in Angelica Kauffman, 1 ↤ 1 The book was published “To coincide with the exhibition at Brighton Museum andĪrt Gallery” 14 November 1992-3 January 1993, according to a flyer for the exhibition the pictures wereĪlso exhibited in York 23 January-7 March 1993. and Canada by the University of Washington Press. London: Reaktion Books, 1992, in association with the Royal Brighton Pavilion Art REVIEW Angelica Kauffman: A Continental Artist in Georgian England.Įd. ![]()
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