Order number: |
CWM/LMS/Home/South Seas Pictures/13 |
Summary: |
Oil colour print, 33cm x 22.5cm (without border), "printed in oil colours and published by the Patentee G. [George] Baxter, 3 Charterhouse Square" [London, 1841].
|
Previous numbers: |
147 |
Extent: |
7 copies |
Admin history: |
John Williams (1796-1839) served as a missionary with the London Missionary Society in the South Seas, 1816-1839.
George Baxter (1804-1867) was an engraver and printer who invented a process of colour printing that made reproductions of paintings available on a mass scale. He supplied colour illustrations to the publisher George Mudie and produced prints for the London Missionary Society. Baxter's process incorporated the aquatint method and involved superimposing the colours using wooden blocks. Baxter used carefully etched plates, a hand press, and the finest colours, oils and paper. He mixed the colours himself but left no record of their composition. The process quickly gained popularity and was widely useful in producing replications of paintings. [Source: National Portrait Gallery] |
John Williams (1796-1839) served as a missionary with the London Missionary Society in the South Seas, 1816-1839.
George Baxter (1804-1867) was an engraver and printer who invented a process of colour printing that made reproductions of paintings available on a mass scale. He supplied colour illustrations to the publisher George Mudie and produced prints for the London Missionary Society. Baxter's process incorporated the aquatint method and involved superimposing the colours using wooden blocks. Baxter used carefully etched plates, a han ... View more |
Custodial history: |
Images held as part of the LMS Museum (inventory items 147) before being transferred to SOAS Library in January 2008. |
Access status: |
Open |
Language: |
English
|
Physical description: |
Variation in colour and finish between different copies, foxing present in many cases, with some tearing and other damage. Most images missing borders and captions. |
Related material: |
See South Seas Pictures/12 for the first image in the pair, "The Reception of the Rev J. [John] Williams, at Tanna, in the South Seas, the day before he was massacred", and South Seas Pictures/14 for a photocopy of a description published by George Baxter of the prints, with an account of the events depicted. |
Format: |
Archive
|