A History of Wood-Engraving/Index
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INDEX.
- Adams, Joseph Alexander, 173.
- Altdorfer, Albrecht, 111.
- America: earlier history and characteristics of the art, 171–177; present position and influence, 177, 178; works in imitation of other arts, 185; errors in practice, 190, 202; future of the art, 202–206.
- Amman, Jobst, 114.
- Anderson, Alexander, 172.
- Andreani, Andrea, 146.
- Anthony, A. V. S., 176.
- Ars Memorandi, 43.
- Ars Moriendi, 43.
- Augsburg: prints, 26; playing-cards, 27; Bible, 52; press, 46, 57.
- Baldung, Hans, 110.
- Bamberg: press, 56.
- Basle: characteristics of the city in Holbein’s time, 117.
- Behaim, Hans Sebald, 112–114.
- Bernard, St.: his rebuke of art, 14.
- Best, Adolphe, 169.
- Bewick, Thomas: the father of modern wood-engraving, 151; sketch of his life, 154; reforms effected by him, 154; character of his genius, 154–160; his works, 161; influence on the art in America, 172.
- Bible: the Cologne, 49; the Nuremburg, 50; the Augsburg, 52; the Strasburg, 50; Coverdale’s, 132; le Clerc’s, 139; Jean de Tournes’, 141; Harper’s, 173.
- Bible cuts: Behaim’s, 113; Holbein’s, 129–131; Jean Moni’s, 141.
- Biblia Pauperum: their use, 31; designs not original, 32; description, 33; place of issue, 37.
- Blake, William, 162.
- Block-printing: invention, 30, 31, 42; decline, 45.
- Boldrini, Nicolo, 144.
- Bouts, Diedrick, 39.
- Branston, Robert, 164, 167.
- Bray, Theodore de, 147.
- Brevière, Henri, 169.
- Breydenbach’s Travels, 55.
- Brontë, Charlotte, criticism of Bewick, 159–161.
- Brosamer, Hans, 114.
- Brothers of the Common Lot: their claim to the authorship of the block-books, 39.
- Brussels: print of 1418, 23.
- Burgkmaier, Hans: genius and works, 99–106; influence on Holbein, 117.
- Calcar, Jean, 146.
- Carpi, Ugo da, 87, 146.
- Caxton, William: Game and Playe of the Chesse, 63.
- Chiaroscuro-engraving, 87–89, 146, 148, 187–189.
- Christopher, St.: print of 1423, 22.
- Chronicles: general description, 52; the Cologne, 53; the Nuremberg, 53; the Saxon, 53.
- Clennell, Luke, 164, 167.
- Cole, T., 197, 200.
- Cologne: early school of art, 42, 43; Bible, 49; Chronicle, 53; press, 57.
- Color: in the holy prints, 26 note; in early German books, 52; in the Livres d’Heures, 60, 61; in chiaroscuro-engraving, 87.
- Color, conventional, 55, 151, 152.
- Copperplate-engraving: influence on wood-engraving, 47, 91, 112, 141, 149, 164, 176, 182.
- Coriolano, Bartolemeo, 146.
- Coster, Lawrence: claim to the invention of wood-engraving, 21.
- Cousin, Jean, 136–139.
- Cranach, Lukas, 110.
- Criblée-work: description, 18; in France, 62, 63.
- Cross-hatching: first use in Germany, 55; in Italy, 86; its propriety in wood-engraving, 152, 186.
- Cunio, Isabella and Alexander Alberico, 20.
- Dalziel, the Brothers, 168.
- Dance of Death: typical mediæval idea, 121; Holbein’s, 123-129; Guyot Marchand’s, 62.
- Davis, J. P., 197.
- Day, John, 147.
- Didot, Firmin (père): his influence on the French revival of the art, 163.
- Dream of Poliphilo, 70–81, 137, 138.
- Du Pré, Jean, 60.
- Dürer, Albert: influence on the art, 90; character of his genius, 91, 92; Apocalypse of St. John, 93, 94; Larger Passion, Smaller Passion, Life of the Virgin, 95–97; single prints, 97; Car and Gate of Triumph, 97–99.
- England: early woodcuts, 63; the art in Holbein’s time, 132, 147, 148; modern revival, 151, 164.
- Evans, Edmund, 168.
- Form, value of, in wood-engraving, 193.
- France: early books in French, 58; early woodcuts, 59–63; influence of Germany and Italy, 62, 135; character of the French Renaissance and its art, 135–141; the modern revival, 163, 169.
- French, Frank, 196.
- Genre art, first appearance in wood-engraving, 121.
- Germany: German block-books, 42, 43; activity and influence of the early printers, 46, 47; the free cities, 48; character of the early press, 48, 56, 57; influence on France, 62; on Italy, 67; on Venice, 68; chiaroscuro-engraving, 87; the Renaissance, 91, 97, 110, 111, 115; decline, 148; the modern revival, 163, 169.
- Gilbert, Sir John, 168.
- Goldsmiths, mediæval: their art-works, 14–16; position in France and the Netherlands, 17; their claim to the invention of wood-engraving, 18, 19.
- Goltzius, Hendrick, 147.
- Goujon, Jean, 139.
- Greche, Domenico delle, 145.
- Gregory the Great: his defence of art, 31.
- Groups, modern, 195–200.
- Gubitz, Friedrich Wilhelm, 163.
- Harvey, William, 167.
- Historia Johannis Evangelistæ ejusque Visiones Apocalypticæ, 42.
- Historia Virginis Mariæ, 41.
- History of the Kings of Hungary, 53, 54.
- Holbein, Hans: the first modern artist, 116; character and development of his genius, 117–120; early work, 120; Dance of Death, 123–128; his democratic, reforming, and sceptical spirit, dramatic and artistic power, 120–127; Figures of the Bible, 129–131; his English portraits, 131; his English woodcuts, 132; summary of his powers and influence, 132–134.
- Holy prints, 21–26.
- Hoskin, Robert, 195.
- Hypnerotomachia Poliphili: illustration of the Italian Renaissance, 70–81; the French reproduction, 137, 138.
- Initial letters: in Faust and Scheffer’s Psalter, 46; in the Augsburg Bible, 52; in Italy, 86; in Holbein’s alphabets, 120, 121.
- Italy: artistic spirit, 65; democratic civilization, 66; the Renaissance, 67; introduction of printing, 68; early cuts, 68; general characterization of the engraved work, 85; decline, 86; chiaroscuro-engraving, 87–89; influence on Holbein, 117, 118.
- Jackson, John Baptist, 148.
- Jegher, Christopher, 147.
- Jerome, St., Epistles of, 70, 71.
- Juengling, F., 195, 200.
- Kerver, Thielman, 62.
- King, F. S., 189, 193.
- Kirkall, Edward, 148.
- Kruell, G., 200.
- Landscape, modern, 186–195.
- Lavoignat, H., 169.
- Le Caron, Pierre, 60.
- Le Clerc, Jean, 139, 140.
- Leech, John, 168.
- Leloir, Auguste, 169.
- Le Rouge, Pierre, 60.
- Le Sueur, Pierre, 148.
- Leyden, Lukas van, 110, 147.
- Linton, W. J., 168, 176, 200.
- Little Masters, 111.
- Livens, Jean, 147.
- Livres d’Heures, 60–62.
- Lorch, Melchior, 114.
- Lorme, Philibert de, 140.
- Lucchesini, 148.
- Lützelburger, Hans, 129.
- Lyons: earliest seat of the art in France, 59; character of the earlier press, 59; the later press, 140.
- Magazines: use and influence, 167.
- Marchand, Guyot, 60, 62.
- Marsh, Henry, 176, 186.
- Maximilian, Emperor: life and character, 97; works executed by his order—the Triumphal Car, 98; Gate of Triumph, 99; the Triumphal Procession, 99–105; The Adventures of Sir Tewrdannekh, 106; The Wise King, 106; influence of his patronage, 109.
- Mayence press, 46, 53, 55, 57.
- Metal-engraving earlier than wood-engraving, 18.
- Middle Ages: position of goldsmiths, 14–18; impersonal spirit, 26; value of painting, 28, 31; immobility of mind, 32; religious temper and intellectual life, 40, 41; art, typical, 53; illustrated by Dürer, 92; by Maximilian’s works, 99–105; by the Dance of Death, 121.
- Moni, Jean, 141.
- Nanto, Francesco da, 145.
- Nesbit, Charlton, 164.
- Netherlands: civilization in, 37; wood-engraving probably invented in, 38; decline of, 47, 57, 147.
- Nicolo, Giuseppe, 146.
- Nuremburg: prints, 26; playing-cards, 27; Bible, 50; Chronicle, 53; press, 57, 114.
- Painting, place of, in mediæval popular civilization, 28, 31.
- Papillon, Jean, the Elder, 148; the Younger, 20.
- Paris: character of the Parisian press, 59, 60; early books and printers, 60; the Livres d’Heures, 60; secular books, 62, 63.
- Périssin, Jacques, 140.
- Pfister, Book of Fables, 56.
- Pigouchet, Philippe, 62.
- Playing-cards, 27.
- Pleydenwurff, William, 53.
- Pliny, reference to Varro’s portraits, 20.
- Porret, 169.
- Porto, Giovanni Battista del, 145.
- Portraits, modern, 198, 200–202.
- Principles of wood-engraving, 180–185.
- Processes: engraving in relief on wood known to the ancients, 13; of taking impressions, 17; en manière criblée, 18; of taking off the holy prints, 21, 22; of block-printing, 30; of cross-hatching, 55; of chiaroscuro-engraving, 87–89; white-line and Bewick’s other reforms, 151–155.
- Pynson, Richard, 64.
- Raimondi, Marc Antonio, 96, 142.
- Reformation reflected in wood-engraving, 51, 112, 117, 120, 126, 132.
- Rembrandt, 147.
- Renaissance: in Italy, 67–85; in Germany, 91, 97, 110, 111, 115; in France, 135–141.
- Romances, popular, 59, 141.
- Rubens, P. P.: reproductions after his designs, 147.
- Ruskin, John: criticism on Holbein, 126; on Bewick, 155.
- Saints’ images, 21–26.
- Salomon, Bernard, 140–141.
- Sand, George, criticism of Holbein, 124.
- Satire: in Bible-cuts, 50, 51; in the Little Masters, 112; in Holbein, 120, 132.
- Saxony: Chronicle, 53.
- Schatzbehalter, 54.
- Schäuffelin, Hans, 106.
- Schön, Erhard, 114.
- Scolari, Giuseppe, 145.
- Sebastian, St.: print of 1437, 23.
- Secularization of art, 50, 110, 111.
- Sichem, Christopher van, 147.
- Smith, Orrin, 167.
- Solis, Virgil, 114.
- Speculum Humanæ Salvationis: description, 34; place of issue, 36; authorship, 38 note, 39; character of the cuts, 40.
- Spirituale Pomerium, 39.
- Springinklee, Hans, 106, 110.
- Stamps, engraved, early use, 13.
- Stimmer, Tobias, 114.
- Strasburg: Bible, 50; press, 57.
- Suger, defence of art, 15.
- Tenniel, John, 168.
- Tewrdannekh, Sir, Adventures of, 106.
- Thompson, John, 164.
- Titian, reproductions after his designs, 144–146.
- Tortorel, Jean, 140.
- Tory, Geoffrey, influence on French engraving, 135.
- Trento, Antonio da, 146.
- Turrecremata’s, Cardinal, Meditations, 68.
- Ulm: prints, 26; press, 57.
- Unger, Johann Georg, and Johann Gottlieb Friedrich, 163.
- Van der Weyden, Roger, 42.
- Van Eyck, 36, 37, 42.
- Varro, portraits in his works, 20.
- Vecellio, Cesare, 146.
- Venice: claim to the origin of wood-engraving, 20; decree forbidding importation of prints from Germany, 27; early cuts, 68; early views of the city, 69; later cuts, 82–87, 143–147.
- Verard, Antoine, 60, 62.
- Vesalius’s Anatomy, 145.
- Vinci, Leonardo da, 142.
- Vostre, Simon, 62.
- White line: description, 151; influence on the art in Bewick’s hands, 153; the engraver’s province, 154, 184.
- Wise King, The, 106.
- Woeiriot, Pierre, 140.
- Wohlgemuth, Michael, 53, 54.
- Worde, Wynkyn de, 64.
- Zainer, Gunther, 46, 52.
THE END.