Your selection
Clear selectionLeave the work to our dedicated Account Managers.
Find Your Perfect Match The top results are exact matches, while the rest are visually similar images curated from our archive.
Drag file here
Upload
Processing search results
Waiting for update..
Error:
Searching for a particular field
| Field | Search term | Example |
| Asset title | title: | title:pony |
| Asset title and keywords | ~ | ~pony |
| Asset description text | description: | description:london |
| Agency prefix | prfx: or $ | prfx:lal or $LAL |
| Asset id | imageid: or # | imageid:250297 or imageid:[2500 TO 4000] or #1551 |
| Agency name | coll: | coll:history |
| Medium | medium: | medium:oil |
| Century | century: | century:20th |
| Keywords | kw: | kw:dog |
| Artist name | artist: or ? | artist:monet or ?monet |
| Artist nationality | nat: | nat:French |
| Creator ID | creatorid: | creatorid:37 |
| Location | loc: or @ | loc:exeter or @exeter |
| Classification | class: | class:57 or #57. Use # for unclassified assets |
| Year | year: | year:1850 or year:[1700 TO 1800] |
(1882-1940)<br />
Eric Gill was born in Brighton in 1892 and died in London in 1940. He was an English sculptor, letter-cutter, typographic designer, calligrapher, engraver, writer and teacher. He received a traditional training at Chichester Technical and Art School where he first developed an interest in lettering. In 1900 Gill moved to London to become a pupil of William Douglas Caroe, architect to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners. He was commissioned for three dimensional inscriptions in stone; the foundation stone for Caroe's St Barnabas and St James the Greater in Walthamstow, London an (1882-1940)<br />
Eric Gill was born in Brighton in 1892 and died in London in 1940. He was an English sculptor, letter-cutter, typographic designer, calligrapher, engraver, writer and teacher. He received a traditional training at Chichester Technical and Art School where he first developed an interest in lettering. In 1900 Gill moved to London to become a pupil of William Douglas Caroe, architect to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners. He was commissioned for three dimensional inscriptions in stone; the foundation stone for Caroe's St Barnabas and St James the Greater in Walthamstow, London and the lettering for the lychgate at Charles Harrison Townsend, St Mary's, Great Warley Essex. ...
We partner with the world's leading museums, galleries and artists, so you have access to the highest-quality imagery.
Our teams can help you find the perfect content and take care of all of the copyright and licensing requirements.
Bridgeman Images
17-19 Garway Road
London, W2 4PH
United Kingdom
T: +44 (0)20 7727 4065
© Copyright 2026 Bridgeman Art Library Limited. Registered in England and Wales as company number 01056394.