History of Steam (Original)
Medium: Gouache on Board
Size: 11" x 9" (290mm x 220mm)
Date: 1974
Code: KeaySteam1LL
This is the unique original Gouache painting by Jack Keay.
Sir Goldsworthy Gurney's second passenger-carrying steam-engine carriage which was used extensively in London for the next two years.
In the period 1825 to 1829, Gurney designed and built a number of steam-powered road vehicles which were amongst the first designed with the intent to commercialise a steam road transport business — the Gurney Steam Carriage Company. Sadly, the steam carriage was not a commercial success.
- Artist BiographyJack "John" Edwin Keay (10 May 1907 - 1999; King's Norton, UK)
Artist who contributed a variety of illustrations and covers to Look and Learn. When he signed his work, it was usually as “Jack Keay”. Jack Keay was born in King's Norton, Worcestershire, on 10 May 1907. Little is known about Keay's career, but he was a popular book cover artist who worked for Pan, Panther, Hutchinson, Fontana and Four Square in the 1957-62 period.
Keay illustrated a number of books in the 1970s and 1980s, including The Change of Life by Muriel E. Landau (1971), Gunfighters of the Wild West by Eric Inglefield (1978), American Civil War by Philip Clark (1988), American War of Independence by Philip Clark (1988) and Viking Explorers by Rupert Matthews (1989). He died in Hounslow, London, in 1999, aged 92.
Jack Keay is not to be mistaken for John R. Keay (qv) who also contributed to Look and Learn.
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