About this artwork
Andrew Geddes’s interest in etching, a medium then almost totally ignored by artists, was probably sparked by his father’s print collection, but it was his friend John Clerk (son of the early Scottish etcher John Clerk of Eldin) who encouraged him to take up printmaking. Although primarily a portrait painter, Geddes etched from the late 1800s until the early 1830s and is often regarded as the herald for the etching revival some forty years later. This portrait print shows the painter William Allan (1782 – 1850) dressed in Circassian armour which he brought back from a visit to Russia in 1814. He stands, the romantic hero, against an imagined battle-scene.
Updated before 2020
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artist:Andrew GeddesScottish (1783 - 1844)
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title:Sir William Allan, 1782 - 1850
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date created:1815
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materials:Etching, touched with drypoint on paper
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measurements:Platemark: 22.50 x 15.10 cm
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object type:
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credit line:Presented by the Royal Institution, Edinburgh
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accession number:P 357
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gallery:
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depicted:
Andrew Geddes
Andrew Geddes
Andrew Geddes, portrait painter and print-maker, was born in Edinburgh and attended Edinburgh University. He worked as a clerk for five years; only after his father's death was he able to study at the Royal Academy Schools in London. He returned to Edinburgh in 1810 and set up a portrait studio;...