Bathsheba, from A Collection of Prints in Imitation of Drawings

Art Institute of Chicago

Bathsheba, from A Collection of Prints in Imitation of Drawings

William Wynne Ryland (British, 1732-1783)

Date
1764, published 1778
Medium
Crayon manner printed in red on cream laid paper
Culture
England
Department
Prints and Drawings
Institution
Art Institute of Chicago

Publisher John Boydell sought to elevate the stature of British connoisseurship of art and to rival France in the production and trade of prints. This print by William Wynne Ryland is a copy of a drawing by François Boucher, now in the British Museum, that was once owned by well-known collector William Esdaile. Ryland’s studies of crayon-manner engraving in Paris inspired him to develop a simplified version he called stipple engraving, in which a series of dots are punched into a metal plate with a sharp needle tool. Although stipple engraving did not catch on at this time, it gained popularity in the late 18th and early 19th centuries as a means to reproduce the varying tonalities of paintings.

The authoritative record is held by Art Institute of Chicago. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.

Linked open data

Authority identifiers that link this record into the wider web of cultural data — stable references you can follow to the source.

Object type
AAT300041273

Related across collections

Semantically similar works from Art Institute of Chicago and other institutions.