C1868

Devil Fish recently Caught in Port Jackson.

Rare, c.19th hand coloured engraving of three men pulling in a large Devilray in Sydney Harbour. From the original edition of the Illustrated Sydney News. Collections: State Library New South Wales: TN115 State Library Victoria: RARENSL N.S.W. 1875

$A 145

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S/N: ISN-FISH-680711009–428908
(DRW 03)
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Details

Full Title:

Devil Fish recently Caught in Port Jackson.

Date:

C1868

Condition:

In good condition.

Technique:

Hand coloured engraving.

Image Size: 

203mm 
x 155mm

Paper Size: 

240mm 
x 174mm
AUTHENTICITY
Devil Fish recently Caught in Port Jackson. - Antique View from 1868

Genuine antique
dated:

1868

Description:

Rare, c.19th hand coloured engraving of three men pulling in a large Devilray in Sydney Harbour.

From the original edition of the Illustrated Sydney News.

Collections:
State Library New South Wales: TN115
State Library Victoria: RARENSL N.S.W. 1875

Arthur Levett Jackson (1834 - 1888)

Documentary detail on Jackson’s personal life is comparatively sparse,  a common situation for c.19th engravers, whose labour underpinned illustrated publishing but who rarely received the individual attention given to painters or draughtsmen. What can be reconstructed places him firmly within the skilled artisan class that supported Sydney’s expanding print culture in the mid to late Victorian period.

Born in 1834, likely in Britain, Jackson would have served a formal apprenticeship in wood engraving, a trade demanding precision, patience, and close collaboration with publishers. Training involved mastering engraving tools (burins and gravers), working on dense end-grain boxwood blocks, and learning to translate tonal wash drawings into systems of line, hatch, and stipple. Such training suggests a background in an urban craft environment rather than an academic art school.

His migration to New South Wales probably occurred during the great waves of skilled British emigration to Australia in the 1850s–60s, when the colonial press was expanding rapidly.

View other items by Arthur Levett Jackson

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