Steam colliers. From 'The Grey River'
Masts and riggings dominate in a visual cacophony throughout the image. The buildings and ships are deeply etched, complimented by the lightly etched sky encompassing grey tones. Number four of twelve etchings from The Grey River portfolio.
Mortimer Menpes was an Australian and British artist whose etchings were influenced by Japanese culture and etching, and the work of James Abbott McNeill Whistler. In 1886 Menpes collaborated with two writers Justin McCarthy and Rosa Praed to produce The Grey River, an illustrated book about the River Thames. The book was published in 1889, and while McCarthy and Praed’s text centred on history, many of Menpes’s illustrations show industrial scenes, such as wharves, dredges, barges and warehouses. A highly prolific artist, Menpes etched more than 500 plates on various subjects.
Mortimer Menpes was an Australian and British artist whose etchings were influenced by Japanese culture and etching, and the work of James Abbott McNeill Whistler. In 1886 Menpes collaborated with two writers Justin McCarthy and Rosa Praed to produce The Grey River, an illustrated book about the River Thames. The book was published in 1889, and while McCarthy and Praed’s text centred on history, many of Menpes’s illustrations show industrial scenes, such as wharves, dredges, barges and warehouses. A highly prolific artist, Menpes etched more than 500 plates on various subjects.
Object Details
ID: | PAD8072 |
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Type: | |
Display location: | Not on display |
Creator: | Menpes, Mortimer |
Date made: | 1889 |
Credit: | National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London |