

Postcard Royal Pavilion Brighton aquatint Hunt after Fox Bredon's
Curator's note
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Postcard with a colour reproduction of an aquatint of the Royal Pavilion in Brighton, East Front, engraved by George Hunt after a drawing by Edward Fox and originally published around 1827 in Sickelmore's Select Views of Brighton. The card was published by K. J. Bredon's Bookshop at 10 East Street in Brighton, numbered 8 in a series, and printed in England. The reverse carries a descriptive text in English on the history of the palace. The card is unused and in good condition.
The Royal Pavilion was originally built in 1787 as a modest seaside retreat for the Prince Regent, later George IV, and enlarged from that date by the architect Henry Holland. Between 1815 and 1820, the building was wholly transformed by John Nash in the Indo-Saracenic style, with its bulbous domes, cusped arches and slender minarets inspired by Mughal palaces. George Hunt, a respected London aquatint engraver of the second quarter of the nineteenth century, worked here after the precise drawing by Edward Fox, a Brighton topographical draughtsman who had settled in the town in 1813 and taught drawing in Ship Street. The card was published by Kenneth Bredon, owner of Bredon's Bookshop in Brighton and chairman of the Brighton and Hove Regency Society, active between 1945 and his retirement in 1976; the card probably dates from the 1950s or 1960s.
Dimensions
H 10.2 x W 15 cm
Weight
5 grams
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