- Samuel Hieronymus Grimm
Infobox Person
name = Samuel Hieronymus Grimm
image_size =
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birth_date = 1733
birth_place = Burgdorf,Switzerland
death_date =14 April 1794 "The Gentleman's Magazine, 1794, p399]
death_place =London
education = underJohann Ludwig Aberli inBerne
occupation = Artist
spouse =
parents =
children =Samuel Hieronymus Grimm (1733-94) was an 18th century
Swiss artist who specialized inwatercolour andpen and ink media. He studied underJohann Ludwig Aberli [http://www.answers.com/topic/samuel-hieronymous-grimm-1 Samuel Grimm at Answers.com] accessed 21 September 2007] inBerne in his home country before travelling in France until 1768 when he moved to England. Critics of his time remarked that Grimm was a "man of genious". [Henry Watson Kent, "Bibliographical Notes on One Hundred Books Famous in English Literature", 227 pages, The Grolier Club, Original from Harvard University (1903)] He was adopted as a travelling companion of the Rev. Sir Richard Kaye who became Rector ofKirkby in Ashfield in 1765 - his role was to record "anything curious". [ [http://www.collectbritain.co.uk/personalisation/object.cfm British Library collection of Grimm's sketchs] accessed 21 September 2007] . Kaye held the largely ceremonial role as ofDurham Cathedral in the 1770s which was said to be "a period of complacent materialism". [ [http://www.collectbritain.co.uk/personalisation/object.cfm?uid=005ADD000015538U00150000 notes on Grimm sketch of Durham cathedral] accessed 21 September 2003]Early years
Grimm spent much of his early life producing etchings, pen and ink and watercolours in
England , but before he arrived he had already supplied the illustrations forFriedrich von Hagedorn 's Poetische Werke which was published between 1769 and 1772. In 1775 he was known to be inDerbyshire andStaffordshire . By 1778 he was working inLondon . [Henry Watson Kent, "Bibliographical Notes on One Hundred Books Famous in English Literature", 227 pages, The Grolier Club, Original from Harvard University (1903)]Role as recording historian
Grimm achieved a niche of recording events of history that might otherwise have gone unreported in the detail he preserved them. For example, the British Library credits him with producing the only surviving scene of the
coronation ofEdward VI . [ Peter Clark, D. M. Palliser, Martin Daunton, "The Cambridge Urban History of Britain", (2000) Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0521431417] Another example of a unique artistic recording of a perishedGloucestershire architectural monument is the 1790 ink wash drawing Grimm produced at theCalcot Manor chapel , which is long since ruined [ [http://www.luminatechnologies.org/luminaaw2.html C. Michael Hogan & Amy Gregory, "History and Architecture of Calcot Manor", Lumina Technologies., prepared for Calcot Manor, July 5, 2006] ] and a he recordedSamuel Pegge 's church which was later rebuilt after a fire.The
British Library possesses 2,662 drawings in twelve volumes by this artist, covering many of the counties of England [ [http://www.wakefield.gov.uk/CultureAndLeisure/Museums/Exhibitions/ChantryChapel650Years/c_image.htm Wakefield.gov.uk art gallery] accessed 21 September 2007] and a further 886 watercolours, in seven volumes, dedicated to the county ofSussex . [http://www.bl.uk/collections/eblj/2003/pdfarticles/article2.pdf ‘Everything Curious’:Samuel Hieronymus Grimm and Sir Richard Kaye] by Brett Dolman. Accessed September 2007] Samuel died in Tavistock Street in London and left his money to a niece in Switzerland. He was buried at St Paul's church inCovent Garden in a service taken by his erstwhile benefactor, the Dean of Lincoln, the Rev. Sir Richard Kaye.Patronage
Grimm's leading patron was Sir Richard Kaye, but this was not his only income. He also undertook work for the naturalist
Gilbert White and William Burrell. William Burrell gave Grimm's Sussex collection in 1796 whilst Sir Richard bequeathed his collection of Grimm's art to the British Museum in 1810. Luckily they valued his work more than Samuel who had left instructions for his papers to be destroyed after his death.References
External links
* [http://www.collectbritain.co.uk/galleries/grimm/ A virtual Grimm sketchbook ]
Further reading
* Grimm, Samuel. Clay, Rotha Mary: London, Faber, 1941.
* [http://www.bl.uk/collections/eblj/2003/pdfarticles/article2.pdf ‘Everything Curious’:Samuel Hieronymus Grimm and Sir Richard Kaye] by Brett Dolman. Accessed September 2007
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