Theodor (Theodorus, Dietrich, Dirk) de Bry, Flemish engraver, goldsmith, editor and publisher. He trained under his grandfather, Thiry de Bry the Elder (d. 1528), and under his father, Thiry de Bry the Younger (1495-1590), who were jewelers and engravers, engraving copper plates. De Bry fled the Spanish persecution of Flemish Protestants and lived in Strassburg (Strasbourg) from 1570 to 1578 and then in Frankfurt am Main, where he established an engraving and publishing business. He twice visited London, where he executed such works as 12 plates for The Procession of the Knights of the Garter and another 34 plates for The Funeral of Sir Philip Sydney. He met the English geographer Richard Hakluyt, with whose assistance he collected materials for a finely illustrated collection of accounts of voyages and travels, Collectiones peregrinationum in Indiam orientalem et Indiam occidentalem (1590-1634; "Collected Travels in the East Indies and West Indies"), which was continued by his sons Johann Theodor de Bry (1561-1623) and Johann Israel de Bry (died c. 1611) but not completed until 1634 by Matthäus Merian the Elder (1593-1650). Among other works that the elder de Bry engraved is a set of plates illustrating Thomas Harriot's A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia (1595) about the first English settlements in North America (in modern-day North Carolina). His illustrations were based on the watercolour paintings of colonist John White. De Bry created a large number of engraved illustrations for his books. Most of his books were based on first-hand observations by explorers, even if De Bry himself, acting as a recorder of information, never visited the Americas. To modern eyes, many of the illustrations seem formal but detailed. //
Category | Artists |
Artists by letter | B |
Artist nationality | Flemish |