Brothers Dalziel

George Dalziel

The Brothers Dalziel were a highly productive firm of Victorian engravers founded in 1839 by George Dalziel (1 December 18151902) and his brother Edward Dalziel (18171905). George Dalziel trained under Charles Gray in London from around 1835. They were later joined by John Dalziel and Thomas Dalziel (18231906). All were sons of the artist, Alexander Dalziel of Wooler in Northumberland.[1]

The Dalziel brothers worked with many important Victorian artists, producing illustrations for the burgeoning magazine and book market of the period. Among the artists they worked with were Arthur Boyd Houghton, Richard Doyle, John Gilbert, William Holman Hunt, John Everett Millais, Dante Gabriel Rossetti and James McNeill Whistler. They cut the illustrations to Edward Lear's Book of Nonsense (1862); Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass.

They also produced independent ventures, most notably The Parables of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ (London: Routledge, 1864), illustrated by Millais, and contributed humorous cartoons to magazines such as Fun, which George and Edward acquired in 1865.

Until the advent of photo-mechanical processes c 1880, they were pre-eminent in their trade. Examples of their work can be seen in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.

At the end of the nineteenth century they collaborated on an autobiographical summary of their work The Brothers Dalziel, A Record of Work, 18401890 published by Methuen.[2]

References

"As I slept, I dreamed a dream" (The Pilgrim's Progress)
  1. "Our portraits". The Graphic. 9 August 1902. p. 179 via British Newspaper Archive.
  2. From Old Books

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