Edward Scriven

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Portrait of Edward Scriven by Benjamin Phelps Gibbon, engraver; after original by Andrew Morton

Edward Scriven (Alcester 1775 – 23 August 1841 London) was an English engraver of portraits, in the stipple and chalk manner. Scriven was the pre-eminent engraver of his generation, with 210 portraits ascribed to him by the National Portrait Gallery.[1]

Life[edit]

Scriven was born in 1775 at Alcester, Warwickshire, though his name does not appear in the parish register. He was for eight years a pupil of Northall (Northaw), Hertfordshire engraver Robert Thew. When Thew died in 1802, Scriven replaced him as Historical Engraver to the Prince of Wales. On the Prince of Wales' succession to the throne in 1820 as George IV Scriven was appointed Historical Engraver to the King.[1][2]

Early in his career he came to London to work on plates for the London publisher, John Boydell. Scriven became the eminent engraver of his generation, producing over 200 portrait engravings.[1]

He was a man of great active benevolence among the members of his profession and a leading proponent and founder of the Artists' Annuity Fund in 1810.[2][3]

He died on 23 August 1841 at his home at 46 Clarendon Square, Somers Town, London, leaving a widow and five children. He was buried in Kensal Green Cemetery, where a stone was erected to his memory by the members of the Artists' Fund.[2][3][4] The monument was designed and created by Charles Harriott Smith.[5]

Benjamin Phelps Gibbon and Robert William Sievier studied engraving under Scriven.

Edward Scriven's engraving of John Masey Wright's illustration to Robert Burns' Halloween

Works[edit]

Scriven worked mainly for the publishers of expensively illustrated books and serials, such as the British Gallery of Portraits, (1809–17); Ancient Marbles in the British Museum (1814) ; Henry Tresham and William Young Ottley's British Gallery, 1828;[6] Edmund Lodge's Portraits of Illustrious Persons, 1821–34; Thomas Frognall Dibdin's Ædes Althorpianæ, 1822; William Jerdan's National Portrait Gallery, 1830–4; and Anna Jameson's Beauties of the Court of Charles II, 1833. His few individual plates included:

He also engraved a set of Benjamin West's studies of heads for his picture of Christ Rejected.[3]

A portrait of Scriven, painted by Andrew Morton, was engraved by Benjamin Phelps Gibbon as an illustration to John Pye's Patronage of British Art.[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c National Portrait Gallery. "Edward Scriven (1775-1841), Engraver". Retrieved 21 April 2020.
  2. ^ a b c Pye, John (1845). Patronage of British art, an historical sketch. London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans.
  3. ^ a b c d e O'Donoghue, Freeman Marius (1897). "Scriven, Edward". Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900. Vol. 51. p. 125. Retrieved 9 December 2013.
  4. ^ Sylvanus Urban (John Bowyer Nichols) (October 1841). "Deaths - London and its vicinity". The Gentleman's Magazine. 170: 441.
  5. ^ "Charles Harriott Smith - Mapping the Practice and Profession of Sculpture in Britain and Ireland 1851-1951".
  6. ^ The British Gallery of pictures OCLC 64067621.
Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain"Scriven, Edward". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.

External links[edit]

Media related to Edward Scriven at Wikimedia Commons