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| National Portrait Gallery |
The following is a combination of two articles Tony Grant wrote on his blog, London Calling, about painting on ivory. He has kindly agreed to share them with my readers.
This particular drawing of Jane Austen was done on paper, but it serves a similar purpose to those done on ivory that Jane references:
This particular drawing of Jane Austen was done on paper, but it serves a similar purpose to those done on ivory that Jane references:
Jane wrote to her nephew, James Edward Austen, on 16 December 1816. She congratulated him on leaving Winchester College and commiserated with him about his time there. Jane writes to him in terms as an equal in novel writing.
“Uncle Henry writes very superior sermons. You and I must try and get hold of one or two and put them into our novels.”
Then she explains the difference between their writing: Uncle Henry's is “strong, manly, spirited-- Sketches full of Variety and Glow.” Hers is comparable to a “little bit (two inches wide) of ivory on which I work with so fine a brush, as produces little effect after much labour?”
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| Ivory Tusk |








