British printmaker From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
William Henry Simmons (11 June 1811 – 10 June 1882 London) was a British printmaker.
Simmons became a pupil of William Finden, the line engraver, but eventually he almost entirely abandoned that style of the art for mezzotinto, in which he attained a high degree of excellence.
Simmons died, after a short illness, at 247 Hampstead Road, London, on 10 June 1882, and was buried on the western side of Highgate Cemetery.[1] His grave (plot no.5984) no longer has a headstone or readable memorial.
Several of his best-known plates are after pictures by Thomas Faed.[2] After Edwin Landseer he engraved Rustic Beauty (the single figure of a girl from the Highland Whisky Still).[3]
Simmons left unfinished The Lion at Home (after Rosa Bonheur) which was completed by Thomas Lewis Atkinson. His prints appeared at the Royal Academy between 1857 and 1882.
Highland Mary, Coming Events, Daddie's Coming, His only Pair, Sunday in the Backwoods, The Last of the Clan, New Wars to an Old Soldier, The Poor, the Poor Man's Friend, A Wee Bit Fractious, Baith Faither and Mither, and Happy as the Day's long.
Also Catharine Seyton, Odin, The Princess Beatrice on Donald, Royal Sports (the Queen in the Highlands), The Sick Monkey, On Trust, Balmoral, 1860, Queen Victoria (an oval), Dominion (Van Amburgh and his animals), The Fatal Duel, Well-bred Sitters that never say they are bored, and the smaller plates of The Sanctuary, The Maid and the Magpie, and The Taming of the Shrew.