Picture of author.

David Gentleman

Author of David Gentleman's Britain

24+ Works 392 Members 3 Reviews

About the Author

David Gentleman is a watercolourist, wood engraver and lithographer.

Includes the name: David Gentleman

Image credit: Photo: John Christie

Series

Works by David Gentleman

David Gentleman's Britain (1982) 81 copies, 1 review
David Gentleman's London (1985) 64 copies, 1 review
David Gentleman's Paris (1991) 38 copies
David Gentleman's India (1994) 33 copies, 1 review
My Town (2020) 28 copies
David Gentleman's Coastline (1988) 21 copies
Art Work (2002) 17 copies
In the Country (2014) 14 copies
Design in miniature. (1972) 13 copies
Lessons for Young Artists (2025) 10 copies
David Gentleman's Italy (1997) 9 copies
Our Jacko (2018) — Illustrator — 7 copies
A Cross for Queen Eleanor (1979) 6 copies

Associated Works

Romeo and Juliet (1597) — Cover artist & designer, some editions — 32,887 copies, 310 reviews
Macbeth (1606) — Cover artist & designer, some editions — 30,070 copies, 263 reviews
A Midsummer Night's Dream (1600) — Cover artist & designer, some editions — 22,850 copies, 208 reviews
Othello (1604) — Cover artist & designer, some editions — 19,548 copies, 151 reviews
King Lear (1608) — Cover artist/designer, some editions — 17,291 copies, 170 reviews
The Tempest (1610) — Cover artist & designer, some editions — 15,792 copies, 191 reviews
The Merchant of Venice (1596) — Cover artist/designer, some editions — 13,202 copies, 125 reviews
Twelfth Night (1601) — Cover artist/designer, some editions — 12,473 copies, 131 reviews
Julius Caesar (1623) — Cover artist & designer, some editions — 11,909 copies, 103 reviews
The Taming of the Shrew (1623) — Cover artist & designer, some editions — 10,028 copies, 101 reviews
The Swiss Family Robinson (1812) — Illustrator, some editions — 9,910 copies, 97 reviews
Howards End (1910) — Cover artist, some editions — 9,660 copies, 144 reviews
As You Like It (1599) — Cover artist/designer, some editions — 8,746 copies, 77 reviews
The Man Who Was Thursday (1908) — Cover artist, some editions — 7,869 copies, 192 reviews
Richard III (1597) — Cover artist & designer, some editions — 7,088 copies, 99 reviews
Henry V (1600) — Cover artist & designer, some editions — 6,673 copies, 58 reviews
The Jungle Books (1894) — Illustrator, some editions — 6,659 copies, 60 reviews
Antony and Cleopatra (1606) — Cover artist/designer, some editions — 6,280 copies, 70 reviews
Henry IV, Part 1 (1598) — Cover artist & designer, some editions — 5,757 copies, 53 reviews
Measure for Measure (1623) — Cover artist/designer, some editions — 5,020 copies, 58 reviews
King Richard II (1597) — Cover artist & designer, some editions — 4,800 copies, 65 reviews
The Poems of Catullus (0060) — Cover designer, some editions — 3,241 copies, 37 reviews
Coriolanus (1623) — Cover artist/designer, some editions — 3,211 copies, 57 reviews
Henry IV, Part 2 (1600) — Cover artist/designer, some editions — 2,904 copies, 35 reviews
The Merry Wives of Windsor (1602) — Cover designer, some editions — 2,392 copies, 49 reviews
The Two Gentlemen of Verona (1623) — Cover artist/designer, some editions — 2,167 copies, 33 reviews
The Greeks (1951) — Cover designer, some editions — 1,736 copies, 7 reviews
Henry VIII (1612) — Cover artist & designer, some editions — 1,588 copies, 24 reviews
Timon of Athens (1623) — Cover artist & designer, some editions — 1,577 copies, 30 reviews
The Man of Property (1906) — Cover artist, some editions — 1,147 copies, 22 reviews
The Two Noble Kinsmen (1612) — Cover artist/designer, some editions — 628 copies, 14 reviews
The Masters (1951) — Cover artist, some editions — 601 copies, 12 reviews
The Complete Poems (1912) — Cover artist, some editions — 534 copies, 4 reviews
Collected Short Stories (1947) — Cover artist, some editions — 438 copies, 4 reviews
War in Val d'Orcia (1947) — Cover artist, some editions — 413 copies, 7 reviews
Time of Hope (1949) — Cover artist, some editions — 250 copies, 4 reviews
The Poems of John Keats [Easton Press] (1980) — Illustrator, some editions; Illustrator — 212 copies, 1 review
Last Things (1970) — Cover artist, some editions — 184 copies, 2 reviews
The Rape of Lucrece (1594) — Cover artist/designer, some editions — 182 copies, 2 reviews
Plats du Jour (1957) — Cover artist, some editions — 119 copies, 4 reviews
Vogue French Cookery (1976) — Illustrator — 34 copies, 2 reviews
Inwards where all the battle is (1997) — Illustrator, some editions — 5 copies
Galaxy (1970) — Contributor — 3 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

4 reviews
David Gentleman has captured London (and some of the western suburbs) through the eyes of an artist, and as such is naturally drawn to looking for the most picturesque and dramatic view. By doing so, even some of the capitals most insulting eyesores such as Centre Point or even under the Westway are made to appear slightly more refined by the stroke of an artist's brush; in the same way that concept visuals for a new shopping centre can appear elegant and gentrified on paper, but look ugly show more and depressing in the cold light of day.

This book was published in 1985. I visited the capital again last week (having not returned for almost 20 years) and I cannot begin to express my horror at what has befallen this once proud city. It is, to put it plainly a second blitzkrieg. London is now as lacking in character as any other metropolis in the world, with increasingly taller skyscrapers taking the form of shards and slabs of mirrored glass, and even a horrific egg case apparently layed by a giant fly (St Mary Axe). These and other mismatching monstrosities vomited up by overpaid and pretentious architects seem to burst their way out of London's bedrock to rape the skyline like some perverse phallic hazing prank - "cocks out lads, and wave 'em at the ladies!"

One of my favourite parts of the book is when David draws comparisons between two otherwise unconnected images:

The City (from Tower Bridge), with it's tall oblong buildings sitting like dark slabs against the sky, juxtaposed on the facing page with an image of Bunhill (Bone Hill) Fields grave yard taken from a low angle with the headstones appearing like monoliths rising up to match the tower blocks on the preceeding page.

The Tricerotops skull (from the Natural History Museum) shown in silhouette, facing another dinosaur from the industrial age 'Old Bess' (Science Museum).

The chimney stacks of Battersea Power Station mirrored on the next page with the 'Frenchified' suspention towers of Hammersmith Bridge reflecting the overall proportions in a way which only an artist's eye would have ever spotted.

Even though I am fully aware that the London this book attempts to represent was already much diluted, even at the time, by weak throw-away architecture; David Gentleman did manage still to shine a photogenic light on it's best side. He'd find it very much harder to do so today.
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½
Beautiful drawings and beautiful observations of India in the 1980s and early 1990s.

Awards

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Statistics

Works
24
Also by
45
Members
392
Popularity
#61,821
Rating
3.9
Reviews
3
ISBNs
40

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