David Henry Friston
David Henry Friston (1820–1906) was a British
Biography
Friston produced illustrations and artworks from the 1850s to the late 1880s. His professional career appears to have started by 1853, when he exhibited Mazeppa at the
By 1863 Friston had started making illustrations for various books and periodicals, including The Churchman's Family Magazine (1863), Tinsley's Magazine (1867), extensively for the
In 1887, Friston was chosen by Ward, Lock & Co. to supply the illustrations for the first edition of Arthur Conan Doyle's first Sherlock Holmes novel, A Study in Scarlet, which was also the first Sherlock Holmes adventure. Friston created four pictures for the story, which were engraved by W.M.R. Quick, and published in the 1887 issue of Beeton's Christmas Annual.[5] Friston's pictures are acknowledged to be the first portraits of the Holmes character.[6][7] The annual was issued in November at a price of one shilling and had sold out before Christmas.
Also in the late 1880s, Friston illustrated the work of the American
Notes
- ^ The Royal Academy Review: A guide to the Royal Academy of Arts, The Council of Four, 1858
- ^ Davenport, Emma Anne Georgina, with frontispiece by D. H. Friston, Our Birthdays, and how to Improve Them, Griffith and Farran, 1864, online at books.google.com, accessed 6 December 2008
- ^ Nowell-Smith, Simon, The House of Cassell, 1848-1958 (Cassell, 1958), p. 82
- ^ The magnet stories for summer days and winter nights, illustrations by D. H. Friston, London: Groombridge and sons
- ^ Stock, Randall. "Beeton's Christmas Annual 1887: An Annotated Checklist and Census", The Best of Sherlock Holmes website, 7 October 2008
- ^ Klinefelter, Walter. "Sherlock Holmes in Portrait and Profile"[permanent dead link], Syracuse University Press (1963)
- ^ Sherlock Holmes at the International Superheroes site
- ^ The Bookman: A Review of Books and Life, vol. 75, p. 354, 1932, available online at books.google.com, accessed 6 December 2008
- ^ The Bedside, Bathtub, and Armchair Companion to Sherlock Holmes
- ^ Notice for In the Clouds (1886) available online at books.google.com, accessed 6 December 2008
External links
- Works by David Henry Friston at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about David Henry Friston at Internet Archive
- Two works by Friston
- Description of Friston's work for Boy's Herald
- Illustrations from Carmilla
- Illustration of Chartist Riots at Newport Archived 17 January 2013 at archive.today
- Friston's oil painting "Sunday" (1862)
- Illustration of a pantomime at Drury Lane for The Illustrated London News, 8 January 1876, reprinted in Daily Life in Victorian England by Sally Mitchell, p. 214 (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1996)
- Illustration of Princess Ida at the Savoy Theatre, 19 January 1884, from the Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News.
- Large copy of Friston's first depiction of Holmes