Henry Thomas Alken

Circa 1820: Duck-baiting by Henry Alken
Circa 1823: A scene from Badger Baiting a series also so called "Master George"
March 1, 1825: One of several engravings of Alken at the same time "published ...by S. & J. Fuller, at their Sporting Gallery, 34, Rathbone Place."
January 1, 1827: A Steeple Chase. "Plate 5..." of 6
1845: Portrait of Henry Somerset, 7th Duke of Beaufort by Henry Alken

Henry Thomas Alken (12 October 1785 – 7 April 1851) was an English painter and engraver chiefly known as a caricaturist and illustrator of sporting subjects and coaching scenes.[1] His most prolific period of painting and drawing occurred between 1816 and 1831.

Life

Alken was born on 12 October 1785 in Soho, Westminster, and baptised on 6 November at St James's Church, Piccadilly. He was the third son of Samuel Alken, a sporting artist. Two of his brothers were George and Samuel Alken the Younger, also an artist. In 1789, the Alken family moved from Soho to 2, Francis Street East, Bedford Square.

Young Henry first studied under his father and then with the miniature painter John Thomas Barber Beaumont (1774–1841), also known as J. T. Barber.[2] In 1801, Alken sent a miniature portrait of Miss Gubbins to the Royal Academy Exhibition. He exhibited a second miniature at the Royal Academy before abandoning miniature painting and taking on painting and illustrating. Early in his career, he painted sporting subjects under the name of "Ben Tally-O".[3] Alken married Maria Gordon on 14 October 1809 at St Clement’s Church, Ipswich. On 22 August of the following year later the couple's first son was baptised. Alken went on to father five children, of whom two were artists, Samuel Henry, also a sporting artist, known as Henry Alken junior, and Sefferien junior.

From about 1816 onwards Alken "produced an unending stream of paintings, drawings and engravings of every type of field and other sporting activity,"[4] and his soft-ground etchings were often colored by hand.[5] When Alken was 26, he and his young family lived over a shop in Haymarket that belonged to print publisher Thomas McLean of the "Repository of Wit and Humour."[5] McLean paid Alken a daily wage of thirty shillings, considered a good income at the time.[1]

Alken died in April 1851 and was buried in Highgate cemetery. Although fairly affluent for most of his career, he fell on hard times towards the end of his life and was buried at his daughter's expense.[3]

Work

Alken worked in both oil and watercolor and was a skilled etcher.[6] His earliest productions were published anonymously under the signature of "Ben Tallyho", but in 1816 he issued The Beauties & Defects in the Figure of the Horse comparatively delineated under his own name. From this date until about 1831, he produced many sets of etchings of sporting subjects mostly coloured and sometimes humorous in character, the principal of which were: Humorous Specimens of Riding 1821, Symptoms of being amazed 1822, Symptoms of being amused 1822, Flowers from Nature 1823, A Touch at the Fine Arts 1824, and Ideas 1830. Besides these he published a series of books: Illustrations for Landscape Scenery and Scraps from the Sketch Book of Henry Alken in 1823, New Sketch Book in 1824, Sporting Scrap Book and Shakespeare's Seven Ages in 1827, Sporting Sketches and in 1831 Illustrations to Popular Songs and Illustrations of Don Quixote, the latter engraved by John Christian Zeitter.[7]

Alken provided the plates picturing hunting, coaching, racing and steeplechasing for The National Sports of Great Britain (London, 1821).[8] Alken, known as an avid sportsman,is best remembered for his hunting prints, many of which he engraved himself until the late 1830s. (Charles Lane British Racing Prints pp. 75–76). He created prints for the leading sporting printsellers such as S. and J. Fuller, Thomas McLean, and Rudolph Ackermann, and often collaborated with his friend the sporting journalist Charles James Apperley (1779–1843), also known as Nimrod.[9] Nimrod's Life of a Sportsman, with 32 etchings by Alken, was published by Ackermann in 1842.[5] In many of his etchings, Alken explored the comic side of riding and satirized the foibles of aristocrats, much in the tradition of other early 19th century caricaturists such as Thomas Rowlandson and James Gillray.[10] One of his best known paintings, "The Belvoir Hunt: Jumping Into And Out Of A Lane", hangs in the Tate Britain and shows one of the oldest of the great foxhound packs in Leicestershire.[11] A collection of his illustrations can be seen in the print department of the British Museum.

See also

Books illustrated by Henry Alken

References

  1. 1 2 R. R. Tatlock. Henry Alken (The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs, Vol. 37, No. 212, - Nov 1920) pp. 247-254.
  2. Henry Thomas Alken (Painting in England: 1700-1850, Collection of Mr and Mrs. Paul Mellon)
  3. 1 2 Ralph Neville,Old Sporting Prints in The Connoisseur magazine, 1908
  4. See text at Donald A. Heald (antique books) under Alken, Henry Thomas, "Illustrations to popular songs".
  5. 1 2 3 Arthur M. Hind.A History of Engraving From the 15th Century to the Year 1914.
  6. Child's Gallery: Painting Annual
  7.  "Alken, Henry". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  8. Henry Thomas Alken. The National Sports of Great Britain (New York: D. Appleton, 1903).
  9. Alken, Henry. "Military Duties, Occurrences etc. etc." (London: Thomas McLean, c. 1820-30).
  10. British Caricature
  11. Fox Hunting and the Ban (icons.org.uk)
Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Alken, Henry". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900. 

Further reading

External links

Wikisource has the text of the 1885–1900 Dictionary of National Biography's article about Henry Alken.

Media related to Henry Thomas Alken at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, March 11, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.