The younger brother of
Frederick Christian Lewis and of
Charles Lewis the bookbinder, he was born in London on 27 March 1782. He studied under
Henry Fuseli in the schools of the
Royal Academy, and worked on both nature and antiquities. Lewis sent landscapes to the exhibitions of 1805–7; he at that time lived with his brother Frederick at
Enfield, and worked for him on
John Chamberlaine's
Original Designs of the most celebrated Masters and
William Young Ottley's
Italian School of Design, for both of which he made
aquatint plates. In 1818, he accompanied
Thomas Frognall Dibdin, to make drawings, on a continental journey, and his illustrations to the
Bibliographical and Picturesque Tour through France and Germany were published in 1821. From 1820 to 1859, Lewis exhibited portraits, landscapes, and figure subjects at the Royal Academy, the
British Institution, the
Suffolk Street Gallery, and the
Oil and Water-colour Society. He died at
Hampstead on 15 May 1871. ==Works==