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Mr. Granville Fell made his name known in 1896 by his ill.u.s.trations to 'The Book of Job.' In careful detail, drawn with fidelity, never obtrusive, his art is pre-Raphaelite. He touches j.a.panese ideals in the rendering of flower-growth and animals, but the whole effect of his decorative ill.u.s.trations is far enough away from the art of j.a.pan. In the 'Book of Job' he had a subject sufficient to dwarf a very vital imaginative sense by its grandeur. In the opinion of competent critics Mr. Granville Fell proved more than the technical distinction of his work by the manner in which he fulfilled his purpose. The solid black and white, the definite line of these drawings, were laid aside for the sympathetic medium of pencil in 'The Song of Solomon' (1897). Again, his conception is invariably dramatic, and never crudely dramatic, robust, with no trace of morbid or sentimental thought about it. The garden, the wealth of vineyard and of royal pleasure ground, is used as a background to comely and gracious figures. His other work, ill.u.s.trative of children's books and of legend, the cover and t.i.tle-page to Mr. W. B. Yeats's 'Poems,' shows the same definite yet restrained imagination.
Mr. Patten Wilson is somewhat akin to Mr. Granville Fell in the energy and soundness of his conceptions. Each of these artists is, as we know, a colourist, delighting in brilliant and iridescent colour-schemes, yet in black and white they do not seek to suggest colour. Mr. Patten Wilson's ill.u.s.trations to Coleridge's 'Poems' have the careful fulness of drawings well thought out, and worked upon with the whole idea realised in the imagination. He has observed life carefully for the purposes of his art. But it is rather in rendering the circ.u.mstance of poems, such as 'The Ancient Mariner,' or, in a Chaucer ill.u.s.tration--Constance on the lonely s.h.i.+p--that he shows his grasp of the subject, than by any expression of the spiritual terror or loneliness of the one living man among the dead, the solitary woman on strange seas.
Few decorative artists habitually use 'wash' rather than line. Among these, however, is Mr. Weguelin, who has ill.u.s.trated Anacreon in a manner to earn the appreciation of Greek scholars, and his ill.u.s.trations to Hans Andersen have had a wider and not less appreciative reception. His drawings have movement and atmosphere. Mr.
W. E. F. Britten also uses this medium with fluency, as is shown by his successful ill.u.s.trations to Mr. Swinburne's 'Carols of the Year' in the 'Magazine of Art' in 1892-3. Since that time his version of 'Undine,'
and ill.u.s.trations to Tennyson's 'Early Poems,' have shown the same power of graceful composition and sympathy with his subject.
II. SOME OPEN-AIR ILl.u.s.tRATORS.
OPEN-AIR ill.u.s.tration is less influenced by the tradition of Rossetti and of the romanticists of 'the sixties' than any other branch of ill.u.s.trative art. The reason is obvious. Of all ill.u.s.trators, the ill.u.s.trator of open-air books has least concern with the interpretation of literature, and is most concerned with recording facts from observation. It is true that usually he follows where a writer goes, and studies garden, village or city, according to another man's inclination. But the road they take, the cities and wayside places, are as obvious to the one as to the other. The artist has not to realize the personal significance of beauty conceived by another mind; he has to set down in black and white the aspect of indisputable cities and palaces and churches, of the actual highways and gardens of earth. No fugitive light, but the light of common day shows him his subject. So, although Stevenson's words, that reaching romantic art one becomes conscious of the background, are completely true in application to the drawings of Rossetti, of Millais, Sandys and Houghton, these 'backgrounds' have had no traceable effect on modern open-air ill.u.s.tration. Nor are the landscape drawings in works such as 'Wayside Poesies,' or 'Pictures of English Landscape,' at the beginning of the style or styles--formal or picturesque--most in vogue at present.
Birket Foster has no followers; the pensive landscape is not suited to holiday excursion books; and, though Mr. J. W. North is among artists of to-day, as a book-ill.u.s.trator he has unfortunately added little to his fine record of landscape drawings made between 1864 and 1867. One cannot include his work in a study of contemporary ill.u.s.tration, though it is a pleasure pa.s.sed over to leave unconsidered drawings that in 'colour,' in effects of winter-weather, of leaf-thrown light and shade amid summer woods and over the green lanes of English country, are delightfully remote from obvious and paragraphic habits of rendering facts.
With few exceptions the open-air ill.u.s.trators of to-day began their work and took their place in public favour, and in the estimation of critics, after 1890. Mr. Joseph Pennell, it is true, had been making sketches in England, in France, and in Italy for some years; Mr.
Railton had made some preliminary ill.u.s.trations; Mr. Alfred Parsons ill.u.s.trated 'Old Songs' with Mr. Abbey in 1889; and Mr. Fulleylove contributed to 'The Picturesque Mediterranean,' and published his 'Oxford' drawings, in the same year. Still, with a little elasticity, 'the nineties' covers the past activity of these men. The only important exception is Sir George Reid, President of the Royal Scottish Academy, much of whose ill.u.s.trative work belongs to the years prior to 1890. The one subject for regret in connection with Sir George Reid's landscape ill.u.s.trations is that the chapter is closed. He makes no more drawings with pen-and-ink, and the more one is content with those he has made, the less does the quant.i.ty seem sufficient. Those who know only the portraits on which Sir George Reid's reputation is firmly based will find in his landscape ill.u.s.trations a new side to his art.
Here, as in portraiture, he sees distinctly and records without prejudice the characteristics of his subject. He renders what he sees, and he knows how to see. His conception being clear to himself, he avoids vagueness and obscurity, finding, with apparent ease, plain modes of expression. A straight observer of men and of the country-side, there is this directness and perspicuity about his work, whether he paints a portrait, or makes pen-drawings of the village worthies of 'Pyketillim' parish, or draws Pyketillim Kirk, small and white and plain, with the spa.r.s.e trees beside it, or great river or city of his native land.
But in these pen-stroke landscapes, while the same clear-headed survey, the same logical record of facts, is to be observed as in his work as a portrait painter, there is besides a charm of manner that brings the indefinable element into one's appreciation of excellent work. Of course this is not to estimate these drawings above the portraits of Sir George Reid. That would be absurd. But he draws a country known to him all his life, and unconsciously, from intimate memory, he suggests more than actual observation would discover. This identification of past knowledge with the special scrutiny of a subject to be rendered is not usually possible in portraiture. The 'portrait in-time' is a question of occasion as well as of genius.
The first book in which his inimitable pen-drawing of landscape can be properly studied is the ill.u.s.trated edition of 'Johnny Gibb of Gushetneuk, in the Parish of Pyketillim,' published in 1880. Here the ill.u.s.trations are facsimile reproductions by Amand-Durand's heliogravure process, and their delicacy is perfectly seen. These drawings are of the Aberdeens.h.i.+re country-folk and country, the native land of the artist; though, as a lad in Aberdeen, practising lithography by day, and seizing opportunities for independent art when work was over, the affairs and doings of Gushetneuk, of Smiddyward, of Pyketillim, or the quiet of Benachie when the snow lies untrodden on its slopes, were things outside the city of work.
It is as difficult to praise these drawings intelligibly to those who have not seen them, as it is unnecessary to enforce their charm on those who have. Unfortunately, a reproduction of one of them is not possible, and admirable as is the drawing from 'Royal Edinburgh,' it is in subject and in treatment distinct from the 'Gushetneuk' and 'North of Scotland' ill.u.s.trations. The 'Twelve Sketches of Scenery and Antiquities on the Great North of Scotland Railway,' issued in 1883, were made in 1881, and have the same characteristics as the 'Gushetneuk' landscapes. The original drawings for the engraved ill.u.s.trations in 'The Life of a Scotch Naturalist,' belonging to 1876--drawings made because the artist was 'greatly interested' in the story of Thomas Edward--must have been of the same delicate force, and the splendid volumes of plates ill.u.s.trating the 'River Clyde,' and the 'River Tweed,' issued by the Royal a.s.sociation for the Promotion of the Fine Arts in Scotland, contain more of his fine work. It was this society, that, in the difficult days following the artist's abandonment of Aberdeen and lithography for Edinburgh and painting, gave him the opportunity, by the purchase of two of his early landscapes, for study in Holland and in Paris. There is something of Bosboom in a rendering of a church interior such as 'The West Kirk,' but of Israels, who was his master at the Hague, there is nothing to be seen in Sir George Reid's ill.u.s.trations. They are never merely picturesque, and when too many men are 'freakish' in their rendering of architecture, the drawings of North of Scotland castles--well founded to endure weather and rough times of war--seem as real and true to Scottish romance as the "pleasant seat," the martlet-haunted masonry of Macbeth's castle set among the brooding wildness of Inverness by the fine words of Duncan and Banquo.
The print-black of naked boughs against pale sky, a snow-covered country where roofs are white, and the shelter of the woods is thin after the pa.s.sing of the autumn winds--this black and white is the black and white of most of Sir George Reid's studies of northern landscape. To call it black and white is to stretch the octave and omit all the notes of the scale. Pure white of plastered masonry, or of snow-covered roof or field in the bleak winter light, pure black in some deep-set window, in the figure of a pa.s.ser-by, or in the bare trees, are used with the finesse of a colourist. Look at the 'Pyketillim Kirk' drawing in 'Johnny Gibb.' Between the white of the long church wall, and the black of the little groups of village folk in the churchyard, how quiet and easy is the transition, and how true to colour is the result. Of the Edinburgh drawings the same may be said; but, except in facsimile reproduction, one has to know the scale of tone used by Sir George Reid in order to see the original effect where the printed page shows unmodified black and white. In 'Holyrood Castle'
the values are fairly well kept, and the rendering of the ancient building in the deep snow, without false emphasis, yet losing nothing of emphatic effect, shows the dominant intellectual quality of the artist's work.
[Ill.u.s.tration: HOLYROOD CASTLE. BY SIR GEORGE REID. FROM MRS.
OLIPHANT'S "ROYAL EDINBURGH."
BY LEAVE OF MESSRS. MACMILLAN.]
It does not seem as though Sir George Reid as an ill.u.s.trator had any followers. He could hardly have imitators. If a man had delicacy and patience of observation and hand to produce drawings in this 'style,'
his style would be his own and not an imitation. The number of artists in black and white who cannot plausibly be imitated is a small number.
Sir George Reid is one, Mr. Alfred Parsons is another. Inevitably there are points of similarity in the work of artists, the foundation of whose black and white is colour, and who render the country-side with the understanding of the native, the understanding that is beyond knowledge. The difference between them only proves the essential similarity in the elements of their art; but that, like most paradoxes, is a truism. Mr. Parsons is, of course, thoroughly English in his art. He has the particularity of English nature-poets. Pastoral country is dear to him, and homesteads and flowering orchards, or villages with church tower half hidden by the elms, are part of his home country, the country he draws best. It is interesting to compare his drawings for 'The Warwicks.h.i.+re Avon' with the Scottish artist's drawings of the northern rivers. The drawings of Shakespeare's river show spring trees in a mist of green, leafy summer trees, meadowsweet and hayfields, green earth and blue sky, and a river of pleasure watering a pleasant country. If a man can draw English summer-time in colour with black and white, he must rank high as a landscape pen-draughtsman. Mr. Alfred Parsons has ill.u.s.trated about a dozen books, and his work is to be found in 'Harper's Magazine,' and 'The English Ill.u.s.trated' in early days. Two books, the 'Old Songs' and 'The Quiet Life,' published in 1887 and 1890, were ill.u.s.trated by E. A.
Abbey and Alfred Parsons. The drawings of landscape, of fruit and flowers, by Mr. Parsons, the Chippendale people and rooms of Mr. Abbey, fill two charming volumes with pictures whose pleasantness and happy art accord with the dainty verses of eighteenth-century sentiment. 'The Warwicks.h.i.+re Avon,' and another river book, 'The Danube from the Black Forest to the Sea,' ill.u.s.trated in collaboration with the author, Mr.
F. D. Millet, belong to 1892. The slight sketches--pa.s.sing-by sketches--in these books, are among fortunate examples of a briefness that few men find compatible with grace and significance. Sketches, mostly in wash, of a farther and more decorated country--'j.a.pan, the Far East, the Land of Flowers and of the Rising Sun, the country which for years it had been my dream to see and paint'--ill.u.s.trate the artist's 'Notes in j.a.pan,' 1895. In the written notes are memoranda of actual colour, of the green harmony of the j.a.panese summer--harmony culminating in the vivid tint of the rice fields--of sunset and b.u.t.terflies, of delicate ma.s.ses of azalea and drifts of cherry-blossom and wisteria, while in the drawings are all the flowers, the green hills and gray hamlets, and the temples, shrines and bridges, that make unspoilt j.a.pan one of the perpetual motives of decorative art.
Ill.u.s.trations to Wordsworth--to a selected Wordsworth--gave the artist fortunate opportunities to render the England of English descriptive verse.
[Ill.u.s.tration: ELMS BY BIDFORD GRANGE. BY ALFRED PARSONS. REPRODUCED FROM QUILLER COUCH'S 'THE WARWICKs.h.i.+RE AVON.'
BY LEAVE OF OSGOOD, McILVAINE AND CO.]
It is convenient to speak first of these painter-ill.u.s.trators, because, in a sense, they stand alone among ill.u.s.trative artists. Obviously, that is not to say that their work is worth more than the work of ill.u.s.trators, who, conforming to the laws of 'process,' make their drawings with brain and hand that know how to win profit by concession.
But popularisers of an effective topographical or architectural style are indirectly responsible for a large amount of work besides their own. In one sense a leader does not stand alone, and cannot be considered alone. Before, then, pa.s.sing on to a draughtsman such as Mr.
Joseph Pennell, again, to Mr. Railton, or to Mr. New, whose successful and unforgettable works have inspired many drawings in the books whereby authors pay for their holiday journeys, other artists, whose style is no convenience to the industrious imitator, may be considered.
Another painter, known for his work in black and white, is Mr. John Fulleylove, whose 'Pictures of Cla.s.sic Greek Landscape,' and drawings of 'Oxford,' show him to be one of the few men who see architecture steadily and whole, and who draw beautiful buildings as part of the earth which they help to beautify. Compare the Greek drawings with ordinary archaeological renderings of pillared temples, and the difference in beauty and interest is apparent. In Mr. Fulleylove's drawings, the relation between landscape and architecture is never forgotten, and he draws both with the structural knowledge of a landscape painter, who is also by training an architect. In aim, his work is in accord with cla.s.sical traditions; he discerns the cla.s.sical spirit that built temples and carved statues in the beautiful places of the open-air, a spirit which has nothing of the museum setting about it. The 'Oxford' drawings show that Mr. Fulleylove can draw Gothic.
Though not a painter, Mr. William Hyde works 'to colour' in his ill.u.s.trations, and is generally successful in rendering both colour and atmosphere. He has done little with the pen, and it is in wash drawings, reproduced by photogravure, that he is best to be studied. Of his early training as an engraver there is little to be seen in his work, though his appreciation of the range of tone existing between black and white may have developed from working within restrictions of monotone, when the colour sense was growing strong in him. At all events he can gradate from black to white with remarkable minuteness and ease. His earliest work of any importance after giving up engraving, was in ill.u.s.tration of 'L'Allegro' and 'Il Penseroso,' 1895, and shows his talent already well controlled. There are thirteen ill.u.s.trations, and the opportunities for rendering aspects of light, from the moment of the lark's morning flight against the dappled skies of dawn, to the pa.s.sing of whispering night-winds over the darkened country, given in the verse of a poet sensitive as none before him to the gradations of lightness and dark, are realized. So are the hawthorns in the dale, and the towered cities. But it is as an ill.u.s.trator of another towered city than that imagined by Milton, that some of Mr. Hyde's most individual work has been produced. In the etchings and pictures in photogravure published with Mrs. Meynell's 'London Impressions,' London beneath the strange great sky that smoke and weather make over the gray roofs, London when the dawn is low in the sky, or when the glow of lamps and lamp-lit windows turns the street darkness to golden haze, is drawn by a man who has seen for himself how beautiful the great city is in 'between lights.' His other work is superficially in contrast with these studies of city light and darkness; but the same love for 'big' skies, for the larger aspects of changing lights and cloud movements, are expressed in the drawings of the wide country that is around and beyond the Cinque Ports, and in the ill.u.s.trations to Mr. George Meredith's 'Nature Poems.' The reproduction is from a pen drawing in Mr. Hueffer's book, 'The Cinque Ports.' There is no pettiness about it, and the 'phrasing' of castle, trees and sky shows the artist.
[Ill.u.s.tration: SALTWOOD CASTLE. BY WILLIAM HYDE.
FROM F. M. HUEFFER'S 'THE CINQUE PORTS.'
BY LEAVE OF MESSRS. BLACKWOOD.]
Mr. D. Y. Cameron has ill.u.s.trated a book or two with etchings--notably White's 'Selborne' 1902,--but to consider him as a book-ill.u.s.trator would be to stretch a point. A few of his etchings are to be seen in books, and one would like to make them the text for the consideration of other etchings by him, but it would be a digression. He is not among painter-ill.u.s.trators, but among painters who have ill.u.s.trated, and that would bring more names into this chapter than it could hold except in catalogue arrangement.
Coming to artists who are ill.u.s.trators, not on occasion but always, there is no question with whom to begin. It is true that Mr. Pennell is American, but he is such an important figure in English ill.u.s.tration that to leave him out would be impossible. He has been ill.u.s.trating Europe for more than fifteen years, and the forcible fas.h.i.+on of his work, and all that he represents, have influenced black-and-white artists in this country, as his master Rico influenced him. In range and facility, and in getting to the point and keeping there, there is no open-air ill.u.s.trator to put beside Mr. Pennell. Always interested and always interesting, he is apparently never bewildered, always ready and able to draw. Surely there was never a mind with a greater faculty for quick study; and he can apply this power to the realization of an architectural detail, or of a cathedral, of miles of country with river curves and castles, trees, and hills and fields, and a stretch of sky over all; or of a great city-street crowded with traffic, of new or old buildings, of Tuscany or of the Stock Exchange, with equal ease. To attempt a record of Mr. Pennell's work would leave no room for appreciation of it. As far as the English public is concerned, it began in 1885 with the publication of 'A Canterbury Pilgrimage,' and since then each year has added to Mr. Pennell's notes of the world at the rate of two or three volumes. The highways and byways of England--east, west, south and north--France from Normandy to Provence, the cities and s.p.a.ces of Italy, the Saone and the Thames, the 'real' Alps and the New Zealand Alps, London and Paris, the Cathedrals of Europe, the gipsy encampment and the Ghetto, Chelsea and the Alhambra--Mr. Pennell has been everywhere and seen most things as he went, and one can see it in his drawings.
He draws architecture without missing anything tangible, and his buildings belong to cities that have life--and an individual life--in their streets. But where he is unapproachable, or at all events unapproached among pen-draughtsmen, is in drawing a great scheme of country from a height. If one could reproduce a drawing such as that of the country of Le Puy in Mr. Wickham Flower's 'Aquitaine,' or, better still, the etching of the same amazing country, one need say no more about Mr. Pennell's art in this kind. Unluckily the page is too small.
This strange and lovely landscape, where curving road and river and tree-bordered fields are dominated by two image-crowned rocks, built about with close-set houses, looks like a design from a dream fantasy worked out by a master of definite imagination. One knows it is not.
Mr. Pennell is concerned to give facts in picturesque order, and here he has a theme that affects us poetically, however it may have affected Mr. Pennell. His eye measures a landscape that seems outside the measure of observation, and his ability to grasp and render the characteristics of actuality serves him as ever. It is an unforgettable drawing, though the skill displayed in the simplification and relation of facts is no greater than in other drawings by the artist. That power hardly ever fails him. The 'Devils of Notre Dame' again stands out in memory, when one thinks generally of Mr. Pennell's drawings. And again, though it seems as if he were working above his usual pitch of conception, it is only that he is using his keenness of sight, his logical grasp of form and power of expression, on matter that is expressive of mental pa.s.sion. The man who carved the devils, like those who crowned the rocks of Le Puy with the haloed figures, created facts.
The outrageous pa.s.sion that made these evil things made them in stone.
You can measure them. They are matter-of-fact. Mr. Pennell has drawn them as they are, with so much trenchancy, such a.s.sertion of their hideous decorativeness, their isolation over modern Paris, that no drawings could be better, and any others would be superfluous. It is impossible to enumerate all that Mr. Pennell has done and can do in black-and-white. He is a master of so many methods. From the sheer black ink and white paper of the 'Devils,' to the light broken line that suggests Moorish fantastic architecture under a hot sun in the 'Alhambra' drawings, there is nothing he cannot do with a pen. Nor is it only with a pen that he can do what he likes and what we must admire. He covers the whole field of black-and-white drawing.
[Ill.u.s.tration: THE HARBOUR, SORRENTO. BY JOSEPH PENNELL. FROM HOWELL'S "ITALIAN JOURNEYS."
BY LEAVE OF MR. HEINEMANN.]
After Mr. Pennell comes Mr. Herbert Railton. No architectural drawings are more popular than his, and no style is better known or more generally 'adopted' by the ill.u.s.trators of little guide-books or of magazine articles. An architect's training and knowledge of structure underlies the picturesque dilapidation prevalent in his version of Anglo-gothic architecture. His first traceable book-ill.u.s.trations belong to 1888, though in 'The English Ill.u.s.trated,' in 'The Portfolio,' and elsewhere, he had begun before then to formulate the style that has served him so admirably in later work with the pen. The ill.u.s.trations to Mr. Loftie's 'Westminster Abbey' (1890) show his manner much as it is in his latest pen drawings. There is a lack of repose. One would like to undecorate some of the masonry, to reveal the austere lines under the prevalence of pattern. At the same time one realizes that here is the style needed in ill.u.s.tration of picturesquely written books about picturesque places, and that the stone tracery of Westminster, or the old brick and tiles of the Inns of Court, are more interesting to many people in drawings such as these than in actuality.
But Rico's 'broken line' is responsible for much, and not every draughtsman who adopts it direct, or through a mixed tradition, has the architectural knowledge of Mr. Railton to support his deviations from stability. Mr. Railton is the artist of the Cathedral Guide; he has drawn Westminster, St. Paul's, Winchester, Gloucester, Peterborough, and many more cathedrals, inside and out, within the last ten years. In ill.u.s.trations to books where a thread of story runs through historical fact, books such as those written by Miss Manning concerning Mary Powell, and the household of Sir Thomas More, the artist has collaborated with Mr. Jellicoe, who has put figures in the streets and country lanes.
There are so many names in the list of those who, in the beginning, profited by the initiative of Mr. Pennell or of Mr. Railton that generally they may be set aside. Of artists who have made some position for themselves, there are enough to fill this chapter. Mr. Holland Tringham and Mr. Hedley Fitton were at one time unmistakable in their Railtonism. Mr. Fitton has ill.u.s.trated cathedral books, and in later drawings by Mr. Tringham exaggeration of his copy has given place to a more direct record of beautiful buildings. Miss Nelly Erichsen and Miss Helen James[1] are two artists whose work is much in request for ill.u.s.trated series, such as Dent's 'Mediaeval Towns.' Miss James'
drawings to 'Rambles in d.i.c.kens' Land' (1899) showed study of Mr.
Railton, which is also observable in other books, such as 'The Story of Rouen.' At the same time, she carries out her work from individual observation, and gets an effect that belongs to study of the subject, whether from actuality or from photographs. Miss James and Miss Erichsen have collaborated in certain books on Italian towns, but architectural drawing is only part of Miss Erichsen's ill.u.s.trative work, though an important part, as the ill.u.s.trations to the recently-published 'Florentine Villas' of Mrs. Ross show. Ill.u.s.trating stories, she works with graceful distinctness, and many of the drawings in the 'Story of Rome'--though one remembers that Rome is in Mr.
Pennell's province--show what she can do.
Mr. C. G. Harper and Mr. C. R. B. Barrett are the most prominent among those writers of travel-books who are also their own ill.u.s.trators. They belong, though with all the difference of time and development, to the succession of Mr. Augustus Hare. Mr. Hissey also has made many books out of his driving tours through England, and may be said to have first specialized the subject that Mr. Harper and Mr. Barrett have made their own. It is plain that the kind of book has nothing to do with the kind of art that is used in its making. Mr. Hare's famous 'Walks' may be the prototypes of later books, but each man makes what he can out of an idea that has obvious possibilities in it. Mr. Harper has taken to the ancient high-roads of England, and has studied their historical and legendary, past, present, and imagined aspects. Of these he has written; while his ill.u.s.trations rank him rather among ill.u.s.trators who write than among writers who ill.u.s.trate. Since 1889 he has published a dozen books and more. In 'Royal Winchester'--the first of these--he is ill.u.s.trator only. 'The Brighton Road' of 1892 is the first of the road-books, and the ill.u.s.trations of the road as it was and is, of town and of country, have colour and open air in their black-and-white.
Since then Mr. Harper has been from Paddington to Penzance, has followed d.i.c.k Turpin along the Exeter road, and bygone fas.h.i.+on from London to Bath, while accounts of the Dover road from Southwark Bridge to Dover Castle, by way of d.i.c.kens' country and hop-gardens, and of the Great North Road of which Stevenson longed to write, are written and drawn with spirited observation. His drawing is not so picturesque as his writing. It has reticence and justness of expression that would not serve in relating tales of the road, but which, together with a sense of colour and of what is pictorial, combine to form an effective and frequently distinctive style of ill.u.s.tration. The drawing reproduced, chosen by the artist, is from Mr. Harper's recent book on the Holyhead road.
[Ill.u.s.tration: DUNCHURCH. BY C. G. HARPER.
FROM 'THE HOLYHEAD ROAD.'
BY HIS PERMISSION.]
Mr. Barrett has described and ill.u.s.trated the 'highways and byways and waterways' of various English counties, as well as published a volume on the battlefields of England, and studies of ancient buildings such as the Tower of London. He is always well informed, and ill.u.s.trates his subject fully from pen-and-ink drawings. Mr. F. G. Kitton also writes and ill.u.s.trates, though he has written more than he has drawn. St.
Albans is his special town, and the old inns and quaint streets of the little red city with its long cathedral, are truthfully and dexterously given in his pen drawings and etchings. Mr. Alexander Ansted, too, as a draughtsman of English cathedrals and of city churches, has made a steady reputation since 1894, when his etchings and drawings of Riviera scenery showed ambition to render tone, and as much as possible of colour and atmosphere, with pen and ink. Since then he has simplified his style for general purposes, though in books such as 'London Riverside Churches' (1897), or 'The Romance of our Ancient Churches' of two years later, many of the drawings are more elaborate than is common in modern ill.u.s.tration. The names of Mr. C. E. Mallows and of Mr.
Raffles Davison must be mentioned among architectural draughtsmen, though they are outside the scope of a study of book-ill.u.s.tration. Some of Mr. Raffles Davison's work has been reprinted from the 'British Architect,' but I do not think either of them ill.u.s.trates books. An extension of architectural art lies in the consideration of the garden in relation to the house it surrounds, and Mr. Reginald Blomfield's 'Formal Garden' treats of the first principles of garden design as distinct from horticulture. The drawings by Mr. Inigo Thomas, whether one considers them as ill.u.s.trating principles or gardens, are worth looking at, as 'The Yew Walk' sufficiently shows.
[Ill.u.s.tration: THE YEW WALK; MELBOURNE DERBYs.h.i.+RE
BY F. INIGO THOMAS.
FROM BLOMFIELD'S 'THE FORMAL GARDEN.'