Robert Wallis (engraver)
Life and work
Wallis born in London, the son of Thomas Wallis, who was an assistant of Charles Heath (1785–1848) and died in 1839. He was taught by his father, and became one of the ablest of the group of supremely skilful landscape-engravers who flourished during the second quarter of the nineteenth century, particularly excelling in the interpretation of the work of Joseph Mallord William Turner.[1]
He engraved illustrations for Turner's "Picturesque Views on the Southern Coast of England" (with George Cooke),[3] Turner's "England and Wales" and "Rivers of France", Charles Heath's "Picturesque Annual",[4] Robert Jennings's ‘Landscape Annual’,[5] the fine editions of the works of Walter Scott, Thomas Campbell, and Samuel Rogers, the "Keepsake", the "Amulet", the "Literary Souvenir", and many other beautiful publications.[1]
On a larger scale he engraved various plates for "The Art Journal" from pictures by Turner, Callcott, Stanfield, Fripp, and others, and many for the "Turner Gallery". Wallis's finest productions are the large plates after Turner, "Lake of Nemi" and "Approach to Venice"; a proof of the latter was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1859, and on its completion he retired from the profession. The remainder of his life was passed at Brighton, where he died on 23 November 1878.[1]
Family
Henry Wallis (1805?–1890), brother of Robert, practised for some years as an engraver of small book-illustrations, but early in life was compelled by attacks of paralysis to seek another occupation. He then turned to picture-dealing, and eventually became the proprietor of the French Gallery in Pall Mall, London, which he conducted successfully until shortly before his death, which occurred on 15 October 1890.[1]
Another brother, William Wallis, born in 1796, is known by a few choice plates executed for Jennings's ‘Landscape Annual,’ Heath's ‘Picturesque Annual,’ the ‘Keepsake,’ etc.[1]
References
- "Wallis, Robert". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
- "Robert William Wallis". metmuseum.org. The Met Fifth Avenue. Retrieved 30 May 2020.
Robert William Wallis (British, London 1794–1878 Hove, Sussex)
- J M W Turner. Picturesque views on the southern coast of England (J. and A. Arch, 1826).
- Charles Heath. Heath's Picturesque Annual (Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, 1832).
- Robert Jennings. The Landscape Annual (General Books, 1832).
External links
- Media related to Robert Wallis (engraver) at Wikimedia Commons
- Engravings by Robert Wallis (Royal Academy Collection)
- Stonehenge, Wiltshire (Engraving after Turner)
- The Scheldt, TEXEL ISLAND (Engraving after Stanfield)
- Saint John and Portland (from "Canadian Scenery", 1842 - engraving after William Henry Bartlett)
- View from the citadel of Quebec (1840)
- Engravings for Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Books, each with a poetical illustration by Letitia Elizabeth Landon:
- 1832: Of a painting by Samuel Austin, The Black-Rock Fort and Lighthouse..
- 1832: Of a painting by Samuel Prout, The Taj-Mahal, at Agra.
- 1832: Of a painting by Samuel Austin, The House in which Roscoe was Born.
- 1837: Of a painting by William Purser, The Sacred Shrines of Dwarka.
- 1838: Of a painting by Samuel Prout, The Church of St. John, and the Ruins of Lahneck Castle.