- Peter Perez Burdett
Infobox Person
name = Peter P. Burdett
image_size = 240px
caption = "Head of a Man" - one of many artworks that Burdett modelled for.
birth_name =
birth_date = c. 1734
birth_place = Eastwood
death_date =9 September 1793
death_place =Karlsruhe
death_cause =
resting_place =
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residence =
nationality =English
other_names =
known_for =
education =
employer =
occupation = Cartographer, Artist
title =
term =
predecessor =
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religion =
spouse = 1. Hannah
2. Friederike Kotkowski [http://www.karlsruhe.de/kultur/stadtgeschichte/blick_geschichte/blick77/biographie Karlsruhe (in German)] accessed17 June 2008 ]
children = Anna Periez(sic) Burdett m. Friedrich Gf v Nostitz-Rieneck
parents = William and Elizabeth Burdett
relatives =
website =
footnotes =Peter Perez Burdett (born "c." 1734 –
9 September 1793 ) was an 18th centurycartographer , surveyor,artist , anddraughtsman originally from Eastwood in Essex where he inherited a small estate and the name "Perez" from his maternal grandfather who was the clergyman there. [http://www.oxforddnb.com/index/101037243/ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography] ] . He would have been notable just for his many appearances in Joseph Wright's pictures but he was also involved with numerous projects including surveying the route for one of the major projects of the industrial revolution, theLeeds and Liverpool Canal , in 1769. He has been described as "if not in the centre at least in the penumbra of theLunar Society of Birmingham". [Taking Notes on the Left’: The Shadowy Career and Thwarted Ambitions of Peter Burdett] , Paul Laxton, UoL, Eighteenth-Century Worlds Research Centre (University of Liverpool) & Walker Art Gallery (NML), 16-17 November 2007, Merseyside Maritime Museum, Liverpool] He spent the last years of his life inKarlsruhe , avoiding debtors, but still active in German society. His German daughter married a Count.Biography
Burdett was born 1734 or 1735 in Eastwood in Essex, the son of William and Elizabeth Burdett. He inherited a small estate and the name "Perez" from his maternal grandfather who was the clergyman in Eastwood. Little is known about his early life untilBurdett met
Joseph Wright of Derby early in the 1760s and he was able to borrow money from him to fund his map making. [http://www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/picture-of-month/displayPicture.asp?id=342&venue=2 Liverpool Museums] accessed17 June 2008 ] . Burdett was a model for several of Wright's paintings and he was able to benefit from his friendship and finance whilst Burdett explained the finer points of perspective to Wright.In about 1766 Wright painted "A Philosopher Giving that Lecture on the Orrery, in which a Lamp is put in place of the Sun" (sometimes called simply "The Orrery"). The painting depicts a public lecture about the solar system, with a lamp—in place of the sun—illuminating the faces of the orrery and the faces of the audience. Consistent with the astronomical theme, the partially illuminated faces may represent the phases of the
moon . The figure to the left of the philosopher has been clearly identified as Burdett whilst the man to the right is thought to be Washington Shirley, the Earl of Ferrers who Burdett stayed with atStaunton Harold which is just within Leicestershire. The Earl was, like Burdett, interested in science and he did briefly own this painting.By 1767 he had produced a map of
Derby . He produced the aquatint "Two Boys Blowing a Bladder by Candle-light". [ [http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/aqtn/ho_68.589A.htm Timeline of art History] ]Liverpool
In 1768, Burdett moved from Derby to Liverpool to create a map for Lancashire as he had successfully done for Derbyshire. He obtained new patrons and assisted
George Perry on his map and history of Liverpool. Burdett created drawings and wrote descriptions of major buildings for Perry's history of 1773.Burdett was so successful at identifying and exploiting his new contacts that he invited his friend, Wright, to join him in Liverpool. This was a successful move for Wright too and he quickly received commissions from the local gentry and merchants, however it was Burdett who founded a Society of Artists in 1769 in Liverpool and became its first president. "Academy by Lamplight", a 1768-69 painting by Joseph Wright of Derby is thought to be of Burdett's academy. The first British aquatint artist is thought to be Burdett, who exhibited these first aquatints in 1772. Burdett brushed acid direct on to an aquatint ground, only using varnish to stop-off large areas of a single tone. His technique appears to have been novel and was different from early methods developed in France. [http://www.moma.org/collection/details.php?theme_id=10452§ion_id=T003497 The Museum of Modern Art] , accessed
17 June 2008 ] Burdett published a first aquatint based on an image byJohn Hamilton Mortimer , but he eventually sold the process to another cartographer,Paul Sandby . Burdett also developed a process for transferringaquatint to pottery; it was not a success.Burdett learnt his aquatint technique from J.B. Le Prince of Paris [Mackenzie, I. (1987), "British Prints, a Dictionary and Price Guide", Art Collectors' Club, Suffolk. ISBN 0902028960] . He showed two plates at the Society of Arts Exhibition of 1772, "An Etching in imitation of a Wash Drawing" and "An Etching from a design of Mr. Mortimer". In 1773 he exhibited a plate entitled "The effect of a stained drawing attempted by printing from a plate wrought chemically, without the use of any instrument of sculpture". There are extant three known images by Burdett, "Banditti Terrifying Fishermen" of 1771 and "Skeleton on a Rocky Shore", both after the painter J.H. Mortimer, and "Two Boys Blowing a Bladder by Candle-light" after Wright of Derby. A copy of the latter in Liverpool Public Library bears on its back the inscription “First Speciman of aquatinta invented in Liverpool by P.P. Burdett, 1774, assisted by Mr. S. Chubbard.”
The artist Paul Sandby learnt the basic techniques of aquatint from the Hon. Charles Greville, who himself had purchased the knowledge either from Burdett or from Le Prince. It appears that Greville had received incomplete information, and Sandby found it difficult to produce a plate by Le Prince's method of sifting the rosin over the surface. He discovered that by dissolving the rosin and floating it on the copper a better effect was obtained.
Benjamin Franklin wrote to Burdett on the 21st August 1773 “I should be glad to be inform’d where I can see some example of the new Art you mention of printing in Imitation of Paintings. It must be a most valuable Discovery: but more likely to meet with adequate Encouragement on this side the water than on ours.” [Godfrey, R.T. 1978, "Printmaking in Britain", Phaidon, Oxford. Page 59. ISBN 0714818380]
In 1771 he produced 'A Chart for the Harbour of Liverpool’. [ [http://www.formbycivicsociety.org.uk/learning/full_article.asp?storyid=10 Origins of Britain's First Lifeboat Station] ] and in 1772 Survey of the County Palatine of Chester [ [http://www.mapforum.com/13/bonhams.htm Bonhams & Brooks] ] .
Karlsruhe
In 1774 he left Liverpool, to escape debt, and entered the service of
Markgrave ofBaden . [http://franklinpapers.org/franklin/framedVolumes.jsp?vol=24&page=144a The Papers of Benjamin Franklin ] ] Intriguingly he took with him the painting of himself and his wife, but left his wife to face his debtors. The painting of Burdett and his wife is now in the National Gallery inPrague . It recently returned for an exhibition in Liverpool. This was the second time the work has been seen in the United Kingdom since it left with Burdett on his departure from Liverpool in the eighteenth century.He did not leave his friends entirely and Joseph Wright visited him in 1774 in south Germany. He married again to Friederike Kotkowski in Germany in
11 July 1787 and he had a daughter Anna, who went on to marry a Count. In the same year he was drawing up plans for Karlsruhe marketplace whose outline can still be seen in the layout of today's buidings. [ [http://www.karlsruhe.de/kultur/stadtgeschichte/blick_geschichte/blick73/aufsatz1 Zur Südentwicklung der Karlsruher Innenstadt] by von Rudolf J. Schott, accessed19 June 2008 ]Burdett died in Karlsruhe on
9 September 1793 .He was a correspondent of
Benjamin Franklin who was a founder member of the Lunar society of BirminghamFact|date=August 2008 which included such figures asErasmus Darwin ,John Whitehurst ,Matthew Boulton ,Joseph Priestley ,Josiah Wedgwood andJames Watt . Burdett has been described as "if not in the centre at least in the penumbra of theLunar Society of Birmingham".Major works
*
Derbyshire map surveyed and produced by Peter Perez Burdett (1762-1767)
*"Two Boys Blowing a Bladder by Candle-light". An aquatint afterJoseph Wright of Derby [http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/aqtn/ho_68.589A.htm Timeline of art History] ]References
External links
* [http://www.jstor.org/pss/1150330 The re-mapping of England, 1750-1800]
* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A1153009 Derby's Unusual Suburb Names]
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