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Eleanor Lay

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Eleanor Lay, usually styled Mrs Lay (active 1788–1790 in Brighton) was a publisher and print-seller, with a fashionable print shop on The Steine in Brighton. As well as selling prints from London publishers, she designed and published a number of prints herself, including four views of Brighton in 1788.,[1] dedicated to Mrs. Fitzherbert. The original watercolours by Lay are in the Brighton Museum.[2] In 1789 she published two prints by the young Thomas Rowlandson.[3] and also co-published several others by him with the London publishers Samuel William Fores and John Harris.

One of her plates by Rowlandson A Sufferer for Decency was acquired by Thomas Tegg at some point and reissued by him with modified lettering in the 1810s in the Caricature Magazine.

References

  1. ^ Ford, John & Jill (1981). 'Images of Brighton'. Richmond on Thames: Saint Helena Press. ISBN 0906964024. Numbers 337, 338, 339, 340
  2. ^ Brighton Museum Collections.(BPC00384, BPC00385, BPC00386, BPC00387
  3. ^ George, M Dorothy (1870–1954). 'Catalogue of Political and Personal Satires Preserved in the Department of Prints and Drawings in the British Museum'. London: The British Museum. BMSatires 7604