Thomas Bewick and Robert Burns

Thomas Bewick illustrated the works of Burns for William Davison and John Catnach of Alnwick.This was a Bewick workshop production. (Iain Bain, Note on Bewick’s Engraving, p265 Memoir) The John Thurston designs were engraved by Henry White. “Many of the tail-pieces were from the hands of Isaac Nicholson and Edward Willis as well as their colleague White” “But they were of the workshop and nothing would have gone out without the check and guidance of its proprietor.”

The editions are numbered TB 2.500A, 500B and 500C by Nigel Tattersfield.

The poetical works of Robert Burns with his life
Vols 1 and 2: Engravings on Wood by Bewick from designs by Thurston. Alnwick, Catnach and Davison in 1808.
The poetical works of Robert Burns with his life
Vols 1 and 2: Engravings and tail pieces illustrating Burns's poems. Published in Alnwick by William Davison in 1808 and 1812

 

Robert Burns visited Newcastle in 1787: you can read about the trip here http://community.newcastle.gov.uk/libraries/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Robert-Burns-in-Newcastle.pdf


He did not meet Thomas Bewick.
"Sleep at Morpeth, a pleasant enough little town, and on next day to Newcastle. Meet with a very agreeable sensible fellow, a Mr. Chattox, who shows us a great many civilities, and who dines and sups with us." [Burns Letters]

This may have been William Chatto (died 1804) the father of William Andrew Chatto,  [pseud. Stephen Oliver] (1799–1864). Tea-dealer William Andrew became an important historian of wood-engraving. His Treatise on Wood Engraving, Historical and Practical (1839) included 300 illustrations by John Jackson. John Jackson (1801-48) had been an apprentice in the Bewick workshop.

You can read about Bewick's trips to Scotland and his enthusiasm for all things Scottish here http://www.bewicksociety.org/cherryburn_times/pdfs/CT%20Summer%202009%20NV-email.pdf

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Bewick  Society

Bewick Society

The aim of the Bewick Society is to promote an interest in the life and work of Thomas Bewick (1753-1828) and related subjects, especially with regard to wood-engraving. The Society publishes a journal called the Cherryburn Times, normally twice a year. This provides a forum for the activities of the Society and keeps members informed about the latest research into the life and work of Bewick and his apprentices. Members publish articles about their own special interests where relevant to the Society. The Society also arranges visits to special collections, some of which are not normally open to the general public. It encourages the development of facilities for conservation and display of Bewick related materials, including wood-engraving as practised by those following in Bewick’s footsteps.
Membership of the Society also gives free admission to the museum at Cherryburn, where Thomas Bewick was born, now in the care of the National Trust.
See http://www.bewicksociety.org

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