[1] Grozer engraved in mezzotint, after Sir Joshua Reynolds, George Romney, and others.
Among his earliest known engravings are The Young Shepherdess, published in 1784, and The Theory of Design, 1785, both after Reynolds.
[1] It was Grozer who gave the name The Age of Innocence to his stipple engraving[2] of the work by Sir Joshua Reynolds, originally believed to have been called A Little Girl.
The picture became a favourite of the public, and according to Martin Postle "the commercial face of childhood", being reproduced countless times in prints and ephemera of different kinds.
This article about an engraver, etcher or printmaker from the United Kingdom is a stub.