Robert Charles Bell (engraver)

Robert Charles Bell (15 September 1806 – 5 September 1872) was a Scottish line-engraver.

Bell was born at Edinburgh on 15 September 1806.[1] At an early age he was articled to John Beugo, the friend of Robert Burns, and while in his studio he also attended the classes at the Trustees' Academy, then under the direction of Sir William Allan. After leaving Beugo he engraved a series of Scottish views and a considerable number of vignette portraits, the best known of which are those of Professor Wilson and Dr. Brunton; but the works which brought him more prominently into notice were 'The Rush Plaiters,' after Sir George Harvey, and the plates which he engraved for the Royal Scottish Association, among which were 'The Widow' and 'Roger and Jenny,' after Sir William Allan; 'The Expected Penny,' after Alexander Fraser; 'The Quarrel Scene in The Dowie Dens o' Yarrow,' after Sir J. Noel Paton and 'Baillie McWhirter at Breakfast,' after J. Eckford Lauder.[2]

The largest and most important plate he ever undertook was 'The Battle of Preston Pans,' after Sir William Allan, upon which he was engaged at intervals for some years, and which he had only just completed at the time of his decease. Several of his best plates appeared in the Art Journal between the years 1850 and 1872. They included 'The Duet,' after William Etty; 'The Philosopher,' after Henry Wyatt; 'The Bagpiper,' after Sir David Wilkie ; and 'The Young Brother,' after William Mulready, from the pictures formerly in the Vernon Gallery;[3] 'Teasing the Pet,' after that by Frans van Mieris the Elder in the Royal Collection; 'Sancho Panza,' after that by C. R. Leslie in the Sheepshanks Collection; 'Words of Comfort,' after Thomas Faed ; 'Renewal of the Lease refused,' after Erskine Nicol; and 'Within a Mile of Ediubro' Town,' after John Faed.

Bell died in Edinburgh on 5 September 1872. His son, Robert Purvo Bell, A.R.S.A., was a Scottish painter of figure subjects.[2]

References

  1. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/2025. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. 1 2  "Bell, Robert Charles". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  3. ONNB. See The Vernon Gallery of British Art, ed. S. C. Hall (3 vols., 1854).
Attribution  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Bell, Robert Charles". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900. 
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