TATE COLLECTION


TATE COLLECTION

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Pen and Ink 

Historically, drawings have been made by applying ink with a quill pen made by cutting the hollow stem of a large feather, from a bird such as a goose or a swan, to create a nib. Hollow reeds were also cut in the same way and used for writing and drawing. Metal pens succeeded the quill during the nineteenth century. Pen and ink is often used in conjunction with other techniques such as washes. (See also Ink.)
 

Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Taurello's First Sight of Fortune, 1849
Dante Gabriel Rossetti
Taurello's First Sight of Fortune
1849
 
Charles Samuel Keene, `Incorrigible!', 1883
Charles Samuel Keene
`Incorrigible!'
1883
 
Samuel Palmer, A Church among Trees, circa 1830
Samuel Palmer
A Church among Trees
circa 1830