Abstract
In the middle of the eighteenth century, as the magazine trade in Britain became
increasingly competitive, publications began offering their readers illustrations.
Beginning in 1761, The Royal Magazine published several illustrations of buildings
in London as part of ‘A Tour through the Cities of London and Westminster’. Many
of these illustrations represented London buildings through perspective views,
often with urban spectators shown looking at them, as if they were in the middle
of their own tour of the city’s architecture. This essay explores how this series of
illustrations formed a virtual tour of London’s most notable buildings, making
the capital’s architecture available in a highly accessible form, as if people could
move through the city while moving through the pages.
Publisher
Amsterdam University Press