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Hablot Knight Browne

 
Art Encyclopedia: Hablot Knight Browne

(b London, 12 July 1815; d Hove, W. Sussex, 8 July 1882). English illustrator, etcher and painter. Browne's only formal education consisted of sporadic attendance at the St Martin's Lane Academy life class and apprenticeship to the line-engraver William Finden. In 1834 he cancelled his indenture and established an illustrators' workshop with fellow apprentice Robert Young, producing etchings and watercolours in preference to the more laborious line-engravings. He won the Silver Isis medal of the Society of Arts in 1833 for his etching, John Gilpin's Ride. He also produced illustrations for Sunday under Three Heads (1836), an anti-Sabbatarian pamphlet published pseudonymously by Charles Dickens, who later preferred Browne to Thackeray as collaborator in the production of The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club. Initially The Pickwick Papers was merely meant to accompany etchings of pastimes of contemporary London by Robert Seymour (1798-1836), but after Seymour's suicide Dickens took charge and made them a narrative with illustrations in monthly parts. Symptomatic of this accommodation of image to prose is Browne signing himself first 'Nemo' and then 'Phiz' (a depicter of physiognomies) to harmonize with Dickens's 'Boz'. Browne played an important part, for instance, in the portrayal of Sam Weller, whom he made less wiry, less an example of what Dickens called 'loutish humour', but more resilient and knowingly ironical.

See the Abbreviations for further details.



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WordNet: Hablot Knight Browne
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: English illustrator of several of Dickens' novels (1815-1882)
  Synonyms: Browne, Phiz


Wikipedia: Hablot Knight Browne
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Hablot Knight Browne
1849 etching for David Copperfield, titled "I make myself known to my aunt".
1850 etching for David Copperfield, titled "I am married".

Hablot Knight Browne[1][2] (12 July 1815[3]8 July 1882) was an English artist, famous as Phiz, the illustrator of the best-known books by Charles Dickens, Charles Lever and Harrison Ainsworth in their original editions.

Contents

Biography

His talents in other directions of art were of a very ordinary kind, but as an interpreter and illustrator of Dickens's characters, "Phiz", as he always signed his drawings, was exceptional, surpassing his rivals Cruikshank and Leech.

Of Huguenot ancestry, he was born in England, in Lambeth (near London) on Kennington Lane. He was the fourteenth of Catherine and William Loder Browne's fifteen children[2]. When he was 7 years old, his (official) father William Browne abandoned his family, changed his name for William Breton and sailed with embezzled funds to Philadelphia where he became known for his watercolor paintings. William Browne was then declared dead by his wife Catherine[4]. Thomas Moxon, husband of William's sister Ann Loder Browne, helped to support the family, who were left badly off.

Browne was apprenticed to Finden, the eminent engraver of steel, in whose studio he obtained his only artistic education. However, he was unsuited for engraving, and having during 1833 secured an important prize from the Society of Arts for a drawing of John Gilpin, he abandoned engraving in the following year and began other artistic work, with the ultimate object of becoming a painter.

In the spring of 1836, he met Charles Dickens. It was at the time when the serial publication of Pickwick was in danger from the want of a capable illustrator. Dickens knew Browne slightly as the illustrator of his little pamphlet Sunday under Three Heads, and probably this slight knowledge of his work stood the draughtsman in good stead. In the original edition of Pickwick, issued in shilling monthly parts from early in 1836 until the end of 1837, the first seven plates were drawn by Robert Seymour, a clever illustrator who committed suicide in April 1836. The next two plates were by RW Buss, an otherwise successful portrait-painter and lecturer, but they were so unskillful that a change was desired.

Browne and WM Thackeray visited independently the publishers' office with specimens of their powers for Dickens's inspection. The novelist preferred Browne. Browne's first two etched plates for Pickwick were signed "Nemo," but the third was signed "Phiz," a pseudonym which was retained in future. When asked to explain why he chose this name he answered that the change from "Nemo" to "Phiz" was made to harmonize better with Dickens's "Boz." Possibly Browne adopted it to conceal his identity, hoping one day to become famous as a painter. It is to be noted, however, that Phiz is usually attached to his better work and "H. K. B." to his less successful drawings.

"Phiz" developed the character Sam Weller graphically just as Seymour had developed Pickwick. Dickens and "Phiz" were personally good friends in early days, and in 1838 travelled together to Yorkshire to see the schools of which Nicholas Nickleby became the hero: afterwards they made several journeys of this nature in company to facilitate the illustrator's work. The other Dickens characters which "Phiz" realised most successfully are perhaps Squeers, Micawber, Guppy, Major Bagstock, Mrs Gamp, Tom Pinch and, above all, David Copperfield.

Of the ten books by Dickens which Phiz illustrated, those typically considered the best are David Copperfield, Pickwick, Dombey and Son, Martin Chuzzlewit and Bleak House. Browne made several drawings for Punch in early days and also towards the end of his life; his chief work of this type being the clever design for the wrapper which was used for eighteen months from January 1842. He also contributed to Punch's Pocket Books.

In addition to his work for Dickens, Phiz illustrated more than twenty of Lever's novels (the most successful being Harry Lorrequer, Charles O'Malley, Jack Hinton and the Knight of Gwynne). He also illustrated Harrison Ainsworth's and Frank Smedley's novels. Mervyn Clitheroe by Ainsworth is one of the most admirable of the artist's works. Browne was in continual employment by publishers until 1867, when he had a stroke of paralysis. Although he recovered slightly and made many illustrations on wood, they were by comparison inferior productions which the draughtsman's admirers would willingly ignore. In 1878 he was awarded an annuity by the Royal Academy. His health gradually worsened until he died on the 8th of July 1882.

Blue plaque, Ladbroke Grove, London

Most of Browne's work was etched on steel plates because these yielded a far larger edition than copper. Browne was annoyed at some of his etchings being transferred to stone by the publishers and printed as lithographic reproductions. Partly with the view to prevent this treatment of his work, he employed a machine to rule a series of lines over the plate in order to obtain what appeared to be a tint; when manipulated with acid this tint gave an effect somewhat resembling mezzotint, which at that time it was found practically impossible to transfer to stone. So skilful was he in drawing and composition that no part of the story was avoided by reason of the elaborateness of the subject.

Notes

  1. ^ Despite certain assertions, there is no circumflex over the 'o' (a mere journalistic addition).
  2. ^ a b According to Valerie Browne Lester, Phiz was in fact the illegitimate son of his eldest sister Kate and Captain Nicholas Hablot of Napoleon's Imperial Guard. Hence his name.
  3. ^ There is some uncertainty regarding the exact date of birth. 12 July 1815 is the date given by Valerie Browne Lester, his great-great-granddaughter who extensively studied his biography, and John Buchanan-Brown in his book "Phiz!". Other possible dates are 11 June 1815 (Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition) and 15 June 1815 (Dictionary of National Biography).
  4. ^ Valerie Browne Lester's lecture at Gresham College on 28/11/2006

References

  • D Croal Thomson, Hablot Knight Browne, Phiz: Life and Letters (London, 1884)
  • John Forster, Life of Charles Dickens (London, 1871-1874)
  • FG Kitton, Phiz: A Memoir (London, 1882)
  • Charles Dickens and his Illustrators (London, 1899)
  • MH Spielmano, The History of Punch (London, 1895).
  • Valerie Browne Lester, "Phiz: The Man Who Drew Dickens" (London, 2004) ISBN 070117742X and ISBN 1844135349 (2006 edition)

External links

This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.


 
 

 

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