122-) English Literature
William Blake
Career
Around
1783, Blake's first collection of poems, Poetical Sketches, was printed.
In
1784, after his father's death, Blake and former fellow apprentice James Parker
opened a print shop. They began working with radical publisher Joseph Johnson.
Johnson's house was a meeting-place for some leading English intellectual
dissidents of the time: theologian and scientist Joseph Priestley; philosopher
Richard Price; artist John Henry Fuseli; early feminist Mary Wollstonecraft;
and English-American revolutionary Thomas Paine. Along with William Wordsworth
and William Godwin, Blake had great hopes for the French and American
revolutions and wore a Phrygian cap in solidarity with the French
revolutionaries, but despaired with the rise of Robespierre and the Reign of
Terror in France. That same year, Blake composed his unfinished manuscript An
Island in the Moon (1784).
Blake
illustrated Original Stories from Real Life (2nd edition, 1791) by Mary
Wollstonecraft. Although they seem to have shared some views on sexual equality
and the institution of marriage, no evidence is known that would prove that
they had met. In Visions of the Daughters of Albion (1793), Blake condemned the
cruel absurdity of enforced chastity and marriage without love and defended the
right of women to complete self-fulfillment.
From
1790 to 1800, William Blake lived in North Lambeth, London, at 13 Hercules
Buildings, Hercules Road. The property was demolished in 1918, but the site is
now marked with a plaque. A series of 70 mosaics commemorates Blake in the nearby
railway tunnels of Waterloo Station. The mosaics largely reproduce
illustrations from Blake's illuminated books, The Songs of Innocence and of
Experience, The Marriage of Heaven and Hell, and the prophetic books.
Relief
etching
In
1788, aged 31, Blake experimented with relief etching, a method he used to
produce most of his books, paintings, pamphlets and poems. The process is also
referred to as illuminated printing, and the finished products as illuminated
books or prints . Illuminated printing involved writing the text of the poems
on copper plates with pens and brushes , using an acid-resistant medium.
Illustrations could appear alongside words in the manner of earlier illuminated
manuscripts. He then etched the plates in acid to dissolve the untreated copper
and leave the design standing in relief (hence the name).
This
is a reversal of the usual method of etching, where the lines of the design are
exposed to the acid, and the plate printed by the intaglio method. Relief
etching (which Blake referred to as "stereotype" in The Ghost of
Abel) was intended as a means for producing his illuminated books more quickly
than via intaglio. Stereotype, a process invented in 1725, consisted of making
a metal cast from a wood engraving, but Blake's innovation was, as described
above, very different. The pages printed from these plates were hand-coloured
in watercolours and stitched together to form a volume. Blake used illuminated
printing for most of his well-known works, including Songs of Innocence and of
Experience, The Book of Thel, The Marriage of Heaven and Hell and Jerusalem.
Engravings
Although
Blake has become better known for his relief etching, his commercial work
largely consisted of intaglio engraving, the standard process of engraving in
the 18th century in which the artist incised an image into the copper plate, a
complex and laborious process, with plates taking months or years to complete,
but as Blake's contemporary, John Boydell, realised, such engraving offered a
"missing link with commerce", enabling artists to connect with a mass
audience and became an immensely important activity by the end of the 18th
century.
Europe
Supported by Africa and America is an engraving by Blake held in the collection
of the University of Arizona Museum of Art. The engraving was for a book
written by Blake's friend John Gabriel Stedman called The Narrative of a Five
Years Expedition against the Revolted Negroes of Surinam (1796). It depicts
three women embracing one another. Black Africa and White Europe hold hands in
a gesture of equality, as the barren earth blooms beneath their feet. Europe
wears a string of pearls, while her sisters Africa and America are depicted
wearing slave bracelets. Some scholars have speculated that the bracelets
represent the "historical fact" of slavery in Africa and the Americas
while the handclasp refer to Stedman's "ardent wish": "we only
differ in color, but are certainly all created by the same Hand." Others
have said it "expresses the climate of opinion in which the questions of
color and slavery were, at that time, being considered, and which Blake's
writings reflect".
Blake
employed intaglio engraving in his own work, such as for his Illustrations of
the Book of Job, completed just before his death. Most critical work has
concentrated on Blake's relief etching as a technique because it is the most
innovative aspect of his art, but a 2009 study drew attention to Blake's
surviving plates, including those for the Book of Job: they demonstrate that he
made frequent use of a technique known as "repoussage", a means of
obliterating mistakes by hammering them out by hitting the back of the plate.
Such techniques, typical of engraving work of the time, are very different from
the much faster and fluid way of drawing on a plate that Blake employed for his
relief etching, and indicates why the engravings took so long to complete.
Career as engraver
On
the completion of his apprenticeship in 1779, Blake began to work vigorously as
an independent engraver. His most frequent commissions were from the great
liberal bookseller Joseph Johnson. At first most of his work was copy engraving
after the designs of other artists, such as the two fashion plates for the
Ladies New and Polite Pocket Memorandum-Book (1782). He also engraved important
plates for the Swiss writer John Caspar (Johann Kasper) Lavater’s Essays on
Physiognomy (vol. 1, 1789), for the English physician Erasmus Darwin’s Botanic
Garden (1791), and for his friend John Gabriel Stedman’s violent and eccentric
Narrative of a Five Years’ Expedition Against the Revolted Negroes of Surinam
(1796), which included illustrations titled A Negro Hung Alive by the Ribs to a
Gallows and Flagellation of a Female Samboe Slave.
Blake
became so well known that he received commissions to engrave his own designs.
These included 6 plates for Original Stories from Real Life (1791), a
collection of narratives for children by Johnson’s friend Mary Wollstonecraft,
and 43 folio plates for part one of Edward Young’s poem Night Thoughts (1797),
with a promise, never fulfilled, for a hundred more. Blake’s style of
designing, however, was so extreme and unfamiliar, portraying spirits with real
bodies, that one review in The British Critic (1796; of Gottfried August
Bürger’s Leonora) called them “distorted, absurd,” and the product of a
“depraved fancy.”
Because
of the éclat with which they were published, the best-known engravings after
Blake’s own designs were those for Robert Blair’s poem The Grave (1808). In
1805 the entrepreneur Robert Hartley Cromek paid Blake £21 for 20 watercolours
illustrating Blair’s poem and agreed to publish folio (large-format) prints
after them engraved by Blake. The number of designs was whittled down, without
notifying Blake, from 20 to 15 to 12. Worst of all, the lucrative commission
for engraving them, worth perhaps £300, was taken from Blake, without informing
him, and given to the fashionable Italian engraver Luigi Schiavonetti. To add
critical insult to commercial injury, when the work was published in 1808, the
radical weekly The Examiner mocked the absurdity of “representing the Spirit to
the eye,” and the reactionary Antijacobin Review not only deplored the designs
as “the offspring of a morbid fancy,” which “totally failed” “ ‘to connect the
visible with the invisible world,’ ” but also mocked Blake’s poetical
dedication of the designs “To the Queen”:
Should
he again essay to climb the Parnassian heights, his friends would do well to
restrain his wanderings by the strait waistcoat. Whatever licence we may allow
him as a painter, to tolerate him as a poet would be insufferable.
The
frontispiece to the work was an engraving after Thomas Phillips’s portrait of
Blake (above), which became the best-known representation of the artist. It
shows him with a pencil in his hand, indicating, truthfully, that he is an
artist, and wearing a waistcoat and an elegant frilled stock, suggesting,
falsely, that he is a gentleman. The most remarkable feature of the portrait,
however, is the prominent eyes. According to Blake’s acquaintance Allan Cunningham,
at the sitting Blake and Phillips talked of paintings of angels, and Blake said
that the Archangel Gabriel had told him that Michelangelo could paint an angel
better than Raphael could. When Blake demanded evidence that Gabriel was not an
evil spirit, the voice said,
"The
Tyger" from the combined volume of the Songs of Innocence and of
Experience by William Blake, ca. 1825; relief etching printed in orange-brown
ink and hand-colored with watercolor and gold.(poems, poetry)
“ ‘Can an evil spirit do this?’ I [Blake]
looked whence the voice came, and was then aware of a shining shape, with
bright wings, who diffused much light. As I looked, the shape dilated more and
more: he waved his hands; the roof of my study opened; he ascended into heaven;
he stood in the sun, and beckoning to me, moved the universe. An angel of evil
could not have done that—it was the arch-angel Gabriel.” The painter marvelled
much at this wild story; but he caught from Blake’s looks, as he related it,
that rapt poetic expression, which has rendered his portrait one of the finest
of the English school.
Later
important commissions included plates for William Hayley’s biography of the
poet William Cowper (1803–04), for sculptor John Flaxman’s illustrations for
the Iliad (1805) and the works of Hesiod (1817), and for the Wedgwood ware
catalogue (1816?), as well as marvelously modest and poignant little woodcuts
after his own illustrations for a school edition of Virgil published in 1821 by
the physician and botanist Robert John Thornton.
Blake
also published his engravings of his own designs, though mostly in very small
numbers. One of the best known is Glad Day, also called Albion Rose (designed
1780, engraved 1805?), depicting a glorious naked youth dancing upon the
mountaintops. Even more ambitiously, he invented a method of printing in
colour, still not clearly understood, which he used in 1795 to create his 12
great folio colour prints, including God Judging Adam and Newton. The latter
shows the great mathematician naked and seated on a rock at the bottom of the
sea making geometric designs. These were printed in only two or three copies
apiece, and some were still in his possession at his death.
More
publicly visible were Blake’s engravings of his enormous design of Geoffrey Chaucer’s
Canterbury Pilgrims (1810), his 22 folio designs for the Book of Job (1826),
and his 7 even larger unfinished plates for Dante (1826–27). Though only the
Chaucer sold well enough to repay its probable expenses during Blake’s
lifetime, these are agreed today to be among the greatest triumphs of line
engraving in England, sufficient to ensure Blake’s reputation as an engraver
and artist even had he made no other watercolours or poems.
Career as an artist
While
pursuing his career as an engraver, in 1779 Blake enrolled as a student in the
newly founded Royal Academy of Arts; he exhibited a few pictures there, in
1780, 1784, 1785, 1799, and 1808. His greatest ambition was as an artist;
according to his friend Henry Crabb Robinson, “The spirit said to him, ‘Blake
be an artist & nothing else. In this there is felicity.’” His materials
were watercolours and paper, not the fashionable oil on canvas, and he painted
subjects from the Bible and British history instead of the portraits and
landscapes that were in vogue. And increasingly his subjects were his own
visions.
His
friends were artists such as the Neoclassical sculptor John Flaxman, the book
illustrator Thomas Stothard, the sensationalist painter Henry Fuseli, the
amateur polymath George Cumberland, and the portrait and landscape painter John
Linnell. Blake’s patrons were mostly concerned with his art, and most of his
correspondence was about engravings and paintings. Only Cumberland bought a
significant number of his books.
Blake’s
first really important commission, which he received in about 1794, was to
illustrate every page of Edward Young’s popular and morbid long poem Night
Thoughts—a total of 537 watercolours. For these he was paid £21 by the
ambitious and inexperienced young bookseller Richard Edwards, brother of the
illustrated-book publisher James Edwards. From these 537 designs were to be
chosen subjects for, as a promotional flyer touted, 150 engravings by Blake “in
a perfectly new style of decoration, surrounding the text” for a “MAGNIFICENT”
and “splendid” new edition. The first of a proposed four parts was published in
1797 with 43 plates, but it fell stillborn from the press, and no further
engraving for the edition was made. Its failure resulted at least in part from
the fact that its publisher was already preparing to go out of business and
neglected to advertise the book or almost even to sell it. The work was largely
ignored or deplored, and its commercial failure had profound consequences for
Blake; he wrote to George Cumberland in 1799, “I am laid by in a corner as if I
did not Exist, & Since my Youngs Night Thoughts have been publish’d Even
Johnson & Fuseli have discarded my Graver.”
Pity
Pity
, colour print on paper finished in ink and watercolour by William Blake, c.
1795 . The print is believed to illustrate lines from Shakespeare's Macbeth.
Most
of his large commissions thereafter were for watercolours rather than
engravings. For John Flaxman, he painted 116 designs illustrating Thomas Gray’s
poems (1797–98); for his faithful patron Thomas Butts, a functionary in the
office of the Commissary General of [Military] Musters, he created 135 temperas
(1799–1800) and watercolours (1800–1809) illustrating the Bible; and he
executed 8 watercolours (1801?) for Milton’s Comus, 6 for Shakespeare (1806 and
1809), 12 for Paradise Lost (1807), and 6 for Milton’s ode “On the Morning of
Christ’s Nativity” (1809), all for the Rev. Joseph Thomas of Epsom, not far
from the village of Felpham (where Blake lived for a while). Later Butts
commissioned 12 watercolours for Milton’s “L’Allegro” and “Il Penseroso”
(1816?) and 12 for Paradise Regained (c. 1816–20); Linnell had Blake create 6
watercolours for the Book of Enoch (1824–27), plus 102 illustrations for Dante
(1824–27) and 11 for what began as an illuminated Genesis manuscript (1826–27);
29 unfinished watercolours (1824–27) for John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress were
still in Blake’s possession at his death. Blake also drew scores of “Visionary
Heads” (1818–25) of the mighty or notorious dead, which were fostered and often
commissioned by the artist and astrologer John Varley.
Of
all these commissions, only illustrations for Job (1826) and Dante (1838) were
engraved and published. The rest were visible only on the private walls of
their unostentatious owners. Blake’s art and his livelihood were thus largely
in the hands of a small number of connoisseurs whose commissions were often
inspired as much by love for the man as by admiration for his art.
Patronage
of William Hayley and move to Felpham
Upon
the commercial failure of his Night Thoughts engravings, Blake accepted an
invitation from Flaxman’s friend the genteel poet William Hayley to move to the
little seaside farm village of Felpham in Sussex and work as his protégé.
Blake’s work there would include making engravings for Hayley’s works and
painting tempera portraits of literary notables for Hayley’s library and
miniature portraits for his friends. Blake rented for £20 a year a charming
thatched cottage, which he and Catherine found enchanting, and on arriving he
wrote, “Heaven opens here on all sides her Golden Gates.” He worked
industriously on Hayley’s projects, particularly his Designs to a Series of
Ballads—published for Blake’s benefit (1802)—and Hayley’s biography (1803–04)
of his friend the poet William Cowper, with engravings printed by Catherine.
“Mr Hayley acts like a Prince,” Blake wrote on May 10, 1801; Blake’s host gave
him commissions, found him patrons, and taught him Greek and Hebrew.
Hayley’s
well-meant efforts to foster Blake’s commercial success, however, strained
their relationship. In Blake’s manuscript notebook, he expressed his resentment
thus: :
When
H---- finds out what you cannot do
That
is the very thing he[’]ll set you to.
Blake
had already determined to return to London when he was beset by legal troubles.