Entrance Portico – Euston Grove Station
- About the work
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About the artist
John Cooke Bourne is best known for producing two series of lithographs on railway construction. The first was published as ‘Drawings of the London and Birmingham Railway’ in 1839 and the second, ‘The History and Description of the Great Western Railway’, was published in 1846. The success of these works caused Bourne to be known as the ‘Piranesi of the Railway Age’. He also illustrated ‘Views in Kairo’ (1840) and ‘The History of Steam Navigation’ (1846) and made drawings of the road bridge spanning the Dnieper River in Kiev, Ukraine, for the engineer Charles Vignoles. From 1866 to 1877 he was unsuccessful three times in standing for election to the New Watercolour Society. He died in Brentford at the age of 81.
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Explore
- Places
- England, London, Euston Arch, Euston Station
- Subjects
- carriage, railway station, railway, topography, townscape/cityscape, Victorian Genre, horse, man, woman, child, road, portico
- Materials & Techniques
- lithograph, colour lithograph
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Details
- Title
- Entrance Portico – Euston Grove Station
- Date
- 1 September 1838
- Medium
- Colour lithograph
- Acquisition
- Purchased from Sotheby's, 13 June 1957
- Provenance
- Sold through Sotheby's, London, ‘Old Master and Modern Engravings and Etchings’ sale, on 13 June 1957 (Lot 353; with GAC 3857-3858 and 3860); from which sale purchased by the Ministry of Works
- GAC number
- 3859