
Benjamin West's First Effort in Art, from "Illustrated London News"
Edward Matthew Ward
An item at Metropolitan Museum of Art
Clad in an 18th-century frock coat, a boy kneels by a cradle and uses a quill pen to sketch a sleeping baby. The setting is a well-appointed country house, with a carpet on the floor, table piled with food and vessels, a leather-bound volume, hour-glass and bow near the window, peacock-feather fan on the floor, and rural landscape glimpsed through an open door. The painter Edward Matthew Ward here imagines how Benjmin West, the talented son of an innkeeper in colonial Springfield (now Swarthmore, near Philadelphia), learned to draw (at twenty-two he would study in Rome, then settle in London, become painter to George III, and succeed Sir Joshua Reynolds as President of the Royal Academy). This wood-engraved version of the image appeared in the "Illustrated London News" in 1849.
Drawings and Prints
An exhibit at Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Department’s vast collection of works on paper comprises approximately 21,000 drawings, 1.2 million prints, and 12,000 illustrated books created in Europe and the Americas from about 1400 to the present day. Since its foundation in 1916, the Department has been committed to collecting a wide range of works on paper, which includes both pieces that are incredibly rare and lauded for their aesthetic appeal, as well as material that is more popular, functional, and ephemeral. The broad scope of the department’s collecting encourages questions of connoisseurship as well as those pertaining to function and context, and demonstrates the vital role that prints, drawings, and illustrated books have played throughout history.