Paradise Regain'd. B. 4. L. 560.

Method Stipple engraving
Artist Benjamin Smith after Richard Westall
Published Publish'd June 4. 1795, by J.&J. Boydell, & G. Nicol, Shakspeare Gallery, Pall Mall; & No. 90, Cheapside.
Dimensions Image 218 x 153 mm, Sheet 375 x 276 mm
Notes An illustration of Book 4, Line 560 of Milton's Paradise Regain'd, from John and Josiah Boydell's The Poetical Works of John Milton (1794-1797). Christ, having been carried to the top of a high mountain, and there tormented by Satan, has admonished his foe not to 'tempt the Lord thy God'. Satan, recoiling at Christ's power, falls backward from the peak, his hand shielding his face.

The publication of Boydell's Milton followed the success of his Shakespeare Gallery, and included 28 plates by Richard Westall after works by Henry Fuseli. Fuseli, one of the Shakespeare Gallery's key contributors, had been inspired by Boydell's success, subsequently painting 40 large-scale scenes from Paradise Lost that he intended to form the core of his own 'Milton Gallery'.

Richard Westall RA (2nd January 1765 - 4th December 1836) was a British painter, illustrator, printmaker, and drawing master, best known for his portraits of Lord Byron, and his work as a painter for John Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery, and Henry Fuseli's failed Milton Gallery.

Benjamin Smith (1754-1833) was a British engraver, printseller, and publisher. A student of Francesco Bartolozzi, his most celebrated engravings were the series he undertook for Boydell's editions of Shakespeare and Milton, though he also produced many fine plates after William Hogarth and George Romney, as well as portraits of George III.

Ex Col.: Hon. Christopher Lennox-Boyd, collector's mark on verso.
Framing unmounted
Price £80.00
Stock ID 36227

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