Artist: Thomas Holloway (1749-1827) after Johann Heinrich Füssli (1741-1825)
Title: Satan
Date: 1790
School: British, XVIIIth-century
Medium: Engraving
Dimensions: 237 x 195mm (plate), 350 x 300mm (sheet)
Watermark: <<1802>> see image below
Inscriptions/marks: in the plate on the left shoulder of the figure of Satan <<Fuseli Delin Holloway Sc.>>, in the plate lower centre <<SATAN.>>, in the plate lower centre below the title <<the Engraver has consulted the Designer and followed the Original,/the mouth of which expresses contempt instead of fear.>>, in the plate lower right, <<79>>
Condition: Good condition on wove paper with wide margins
Description: Engraving by Thomas Holloway after a drawing by Johann Heinrich Füssli (1741-1825) depicting Satan. Illustration to Essays on Physiognomy, designed to promote the knowledge and the love of mankind. by John Caspar Lavater, … Illustrated by more than eight hundred engravings accurately copied; and some duplicates added from originals, executed by, or under the inspection of, Thomas Holloway. Translated from the French by Henry Hunter, D.D. … London: Printed for John Murray, No. 32, Fleet-Street; H. Hunter, D.D., Charles’s-Square; and T. Holloway, No. 11, Bache’s Row, Hoxton. MDCCLXXXIX. The English translation of Lavater’s famous essays was issued in parts from January 1788. This engraving illustrated Essays on Physiognomy (Vol II, facing p.285, plate 79 (Issued in part no. XVII, Dec 1790). The publication went through at least ten editions. This page is probably from a later edition given the watermark.
Reference: See BM 1863,0509.18 for a description of this print.