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Maker(s):Bell, Andrew
Culture:Scottish (1726-1809)
Title:prints
Date Made:1771-1809
Type:Print
Materials:laid paper, ink
Place Made:United Kingdom; Scotland; Edinburgh
Measurements:Sheet: 1 1/2 in x 8 1/8 in; 3.8 cm x 20.6 cm; Plate: 9 1/2 in x 7 3/4 in; 24.1 cm x 19.7 cm
Accession Number:  HD 2012.19.2.2
Credit Line:Hall and Kate Peterson Fund for Paintings, Prints, Drawings and Photographs
Museum Collection:  Historic Deerfield

Description:
Loose encyclopedia pages on the subject of tea, which accompany the illustration of the tea tree (Camellia sinensis), 2012.19.2.1; Andrew Bell (1726-1809) was a well-regarded Scottish engraver whose specialty was natural history and medical illustration engraving. He was the first Scottish engraver to practice aquatint. In 1793, inspired by the work of Diderot in France, Bell co-founded the Encyclopedia Britannica in England. Bell was engraver to the Prince of Wales. A short biography of Bell appears on Wikipedia: Andrew Bell (1726–1809) was a Scottish engraver and printer, who co-founded Encyclopædia Britannica with Colin Macfarquhar. Bell was born in Edinburgh in 1726, his father a baker. He had little formal education and was apprenticed to the engraver Richard Cooper. Bell was a colourful Scot. His height was 4 foot 6; he had crooked legs and an enormous nose that he would sometimes augment with a paper-mache version whenever anyone stared at his natural nose. Bell began work as an engraver of crests, names, etc. on dog collars. Despite his small stature, he deliberately rode the tallest horse available in Edinburgh, dismounting by a ladder to the cheers of onlookers. Bell produced almost all of the copperplate engravings for the 1st-4th editions of the Britannica: 160 for the 1st, 340 for the 2nd, 542 for the 3rd, and 531 for the 4th. By contrast, the 50 plates of the Supplement to the 3rd edition were engraved by D. Lizars. For the 1st edition, Bell produced three full pages of anatomically accurate depictions of dissected female pelvises and of foetuses in wombs for the midwifery article; these illustrations shocked King George III who commanded that the pages be ripped from every copy. After Macfarquhar died in 1793, Bell bought out his heirs and became sole owner of the Britannica until his own death in 1809. He quarrelled with his son-in-law, Thomas Bonar, and refused to speak with him for the last ten years of his life.

Tags:
tea

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https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?t=objects&type=ext&id_number=HD+2012.19.2.2

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