[London from the Roof of the Albion Mills].
[London],
Published as the Act directs,
1792 [to] 1793.
Hand-coloured engraving with aquatint, printed on six sheets, a few tears skilfully repaired.
Image: 430 by 3300mm (17 by 130 inches).
12568
notes:
A fine example of the world's first panorama, in the original sense of the word.
A panorama in the eighteenth century was a circular painting showing a landscape in the round, housed in a specially built viewing structure. The first panorama was conceived by the British painter Robert Barker, who patented the idea in 1787, and beginning with the city of Edinburgh in the round. This first attempt was unsuccessful, and was dismissed by Sir Joshua Reynolds. Barker ...
A panorama in the eighteenth century was a circular painting showing a landscape in the round, housed in a specially built viewing structure. The first panorama was conceived by the British painter Robert Barker, who patented the idea in 1787, and beginning with the city of Edinburgh in the round. This first attempt was unsuccessful, and was dismissed by Sir Joshua Reynolds. Barker ...
bibliography:
J.R. Abbey, Life in England, in Aquatint and Lithography (London: Curwen, 1956), p.460; R.D. Altick, Shows of London, p.130-132; London from the roof of the Albion Mills: a facsimile of Robert and Henry Aston Barker's panorama of 1792-3; Ralph Hyde, Panoramania: The Art and Entertainment of the 'All-Embracing' View exhibition catalogue, Barbican Art Gallery, 1988, no. 28; Ralph Hyde, Gilded scenes and shining prospects, 59; Ralph Hyde, private notes; J. Pragnell, London panoramas of Robert Barker and Thomas Girtin (London: LTS, 1968).