All Souls College, Oxford

Method Photogravure
Artist Emery Walker after Edmund Hort New
Published Published by Edmund Hort New: 17 Worcester Place Oxford A.D. 1923
Dimensions Image 345 x 410 mm, Plate 375 x 442 mm, Sheet 480 x 650 mm
Notes A view of All Souls College from the High Street by Edmund Hort New, with an inset elevation of the college's towers in the top right corner of the plate.

Inscription below image reads: 'All Souls College, Oxford, Founded in the name of King Henry VI by Henry Chichele, Bishop of St David's & Archbishop of Canterbury AD 1437, in memory of King Henry V and of others who died in the French Wars.'

Edmund Hort New (1871-1931), known as EH New, was an English artist and illustrator. He was born in Evesham, the son of an important lawyer, and attended the Birmingham Municipal School of Art. He began painting landscape and later devoted himself to illustration. Early in his career he worked with Ruskin and other associated Arts and Crafts artists. He later went on to work for William Morris's Kelmscott Press. The influence of these experiences is evident in his prints, with their decorative borders, armourials, and elegant typefaces.

In 1905, Edmund Hort New moved to Oxford, and over a period of years, produced a series of drawings of the Oxford Colleges, based on David Loggan's 1675 aerial perspectives. New took Loggan's format and enriched his prints with many fine details of and about the colleges. The series was printed and published by Emery Walker, who marketed them appropriately as 'New Loggan Prints.' New's college views were attractive to collectors because of their high level of detail, and were in most cases a far closer representation of the colleges than the original Loggan views. These prints were made through photogravure, a relatively new process at the time. For a photogravure, the print was made by transferring a photo to a copper plate and then printing from it. With the EH New prints, a contact print of New's pen and ink drawing was made and the large negative attached to a plate which was then exposed in an acid bath, the acid only biting where the negative was clear, creating an engraved plate of the drawing.

Emery Walker (1851 - 1933) was a British master-printer, typographer and engraver. He was one of the leading figures in the Arts and Crafts Movement, and the revival of engraving. Walker helped to found the Kelmscott Press and was later a partner of Cobden-Sanderson in the Doves Press, where he was responsible for much of the successful work produced.

Condition: Light creasing to margin not affecting the image or plate. A few stains in the margins not affecting the image or plate. Surface dirt on verso not affecting the recto.
Framing unmounted
Price £450.00
Stock ID 51952

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