thumb|upright=1.2|Kip's engraving of [[Chevening, Kent, with a large garden canal, published in 1719.]]
Johannes "Jan" Kip (1652/53 in Amsterdam – 1722 in Westminster) was a Dutch draftsman, engraver and print dealer. Together with Leonard Knyff, he made a speciality of engraved views of English country houses.
Life
Jan Kip was born in Amsterdam in 1653.
In April 1680, at the age of twenty-seven, Kip married Elisabeth Breda in Amsterdam.
His most important works were the large fold-out folio illustrations for Britannia Illustrata, 1708; for the 65 folio plates he engraved for the antiquary Sir Robert Atkyns, The Ancient and Present State of Glostershire, 1712 (1st edition); and for Le Nouveau Théâtre de la Grande Bretagne ou description exacte des palais de la Reine, et des Maisons les plus considerables des des Seigneurs & des Gentilshommes de la Grande Bretagne, 1715, an extended reprint in collaboration with other artists.
Partnership with Leonard Knyff
thumb|260px|Not all the gentlemen's seats were as up-to-date as [[Hampton Court: many-gabled Jacobean Toddington Manor, with the remnant of its moat, its parish church and half-timbered outbuildings contrasted with its fine, brand-new formal garden.]]
The linked careers of Jan Kip and Leonard Knyff made a specialty of engraved views of English country houses, typically represented in detail from a bird's-eye perspective, a pictorial approach used in topographical illustration. Knyff supplied the drawings, which Kip translated into engraved plates.
Their major work was Britannia Illustrata, a collection of engraved views showing royal palaces and the country houses of Britain’s nobility and gentry. First issued in London in 1707, it included 80 copperplate engravings and was expanded in later editions published in 1708–09.
