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CH133793
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KWE6317554 The Larder. From an engraving by Richard Earlom, after Maerten de Vos, after Joseph Farington. 18th century. Meat and game stored before cooking.
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XJF366914 Joseph Farington R.A (1747-1821) English painter; engraving was said to be by William Evans but it is now believed to be by Richard Evans (1785-1871);
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XLF3782937 Thames at Reading. Coloured aquatinit by Joseph Farington (1747-1821), from 'History of the River Thames' by John Boydell, 18th-century British publisher (1720–1804).'English Rivers and Canals' by Frank Eyer and Charles Hadfield (London: Collins, 1945) p. between 8 and 9
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WRD274280 George Beaumont (1753-1827); Joseph Farington (1747-1821);
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BAL33336 by Joseph Farington
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STC60138 by Joseph Farington
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MOL55289 by Joseph Farington
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STC64846 by Joseph Farington
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GHL8946 by Joseph Farington
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GHL8942 by Joseph Farington
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VIB105689 by Joseph Farington
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GHL6775 by Joseph Farington
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AMO110723 by Joseph Farington
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GHL68642 by Joseph Farington
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AMO110722 by Joseph Farington
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STC64845 by Joseph Farington
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XYC111931 by Joseph Farington
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GHL6234 by Joseph Farington
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VIB98327 by Joseph Farington
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NCO292098 possibly by Joseph Farington or Anthony Devis; view from Holywell Quadrangle;
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IGM7389720 Arist: Joseph Farington (1747-1821)View of tin mine with waterwheel in middle distance, various comments on colour and materials written in pencil on image; preparatory sketch
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BL3293965 An history of the principal rivers of Great Britain. [By William Combe. With aquatints by J. C. Stadler after drawings by Joseph Farington.]Author: Combe, William / Illustrator: Farington, J; Stadler, J.CLondon: John & Josiah Boydell, 1794, 1796Language: EnglishSource/Shelfmark: 192.f.8-9, plate 3
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BL3277036 An history of the principal rivers of Great Britain. [By William Combe. With aquatints by J. C. Stadler after drawings by Joseph Farington.].Author: Combe, William / Illustrator: Farington, J; Stadler, J.CLondon: John & Josiah Boydell, 1794, 1796Language: EnglishSource/Shelfmark: 192.f.8 volume 1, facing page 252.
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BL3277046 An history of the principal rivers of Great Britain. [By William Combe. With aquatints by J. C. Stadler after drawings by Joseph Farington.].Author: Combe, William / Illustrator: Farington, J; Stadler, J.CLondon: John & Josiah Boydell, 1794, 1796Language: EnglishSource/Shelfmark: 192.f.8 volume 1, facing page 264.
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LLJ603053 View of Somerset Place, the Adelphi, etc from the Temple Garden; published 1 June 1795
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LLJ603054 Battersea, Chelsea and London, from Mr Rucker's Villa; published 1 June 1795
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XYC232596
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FER185310
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LLJ586022 A view of Greenwich, London, and up the River Thames; published 1 June 1795
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LLJ602576 View of London from Greenwich Park; published 1 June 1796
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LLJ603057 View of London from Lambeth; publsihed 1 June 1795
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XYC232597
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XYC232599
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LLJ610879 London Bridge, 1795.
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HRP2966614 Pencil and watercolour view of Hampton Court Palace from the south side of the River Thames. This was the preparatory sketch for Farington's published view (an aquatint) of 1793
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NCO292168
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LLJ582756 Blackfriar's Bridge. Published 1795.
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XYC232598
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IGM9028781 By Joseph Farington R.A. (1747 - 1821) Joseph Farington R.A. (1747 - 1821) Lancashire, the son of the vicar of Leigh and rector of Warrington. He was educated in Manchester and studied under Richard Wilson in London from 1763. He entered the Royal Academy Schools in 1769 and became an Academician in 1785. His strength was in pen, ink and wash drawings of topographical views. He made extensive sketching tours of the UK and settled in the North Country from 1776. Works made there led to the publication ‘Views of the Lakes of Cumberland and Westmorland’ (1785).Samuel Middiman (1750 - 1831). In 1767 Samuel Middiman was apprenticed to the engraver William Byrne and later worked with printmakers William Woollett and Francesco Bartolozzi. As a specialist in landscape etching, his skills were always in demand. He made 16 plates for the publication ‘Picturesque Castles and Abbeys in England and Wales’ (1807-11) and 53 for ‘Select Views in Great Britain’ (1814). From 1780 to 1782 and from 1795 to 1797 he exhibited drawings at the Royal Academy. Later in his career he turned to landscape painting and exhibited several works at the British Institution. Published May 1813, by T. Cadell & W. Davies, Strand, London, a publishing company established in London in 1793. Cadell & Davies was formed when bookseller and publisher Thomas Cadell the elder (1742–1802) bequeathed his business to his son Thomas Cadell the younger (1773–1836) and the elder Cadell's apprentice William Davies. Cadell & Davies shut down after Davies death in 1819 and Cadell continued in business until his own death in 1836.Carclaze mine, near St Austell in Cornwall, produced tin and china clay for over 400 years. The tin ore is in a matrix of shorl and quartz and was quarried from open cast pits rather than mined. The tin was then separated by crushing and washing the rock. Carclaze was worked exclusively for tin until 1851, from which time china clay was also quarried. Following the collapse of the price of tin in the 1860s, Carclaze continued to produce china clay.Carclaze was a huge operation and in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries became a ‘must-see’ location for visitors from all over Europe, particularly those interested in geology and mineralogy. Intellectually, the early scientific interest in Carclaze can be seen as part of the Enlightenment, but in the nineteenth century the influence of Romanticism can also be detected. Much of the attraction was due to the openness and accessibility of Carclaze pit, which allowed the geology to be easily appreciated. This resulted in the mine and its development being particularly well documented through contemporary accounts and illustrations.
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XCS7076708
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XYC249789
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BL3260250 The West side of London Bridge. The East side of London Bridge. Sutton Nicholls fecit. An historical description of the great and admirable bridge in the City of London over the River Thames...Illustrator: Stadler, Joseph C; Farington, ILondres: Joseph Smith, 1724-1729Language: EnglishSource/Shelfmark: Maps.K.Top.22.36.k
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LMG148385
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WRD274278
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XYC232595
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LLJ603044 View of Greenwich from Deptford Yard; published 1 June 1793
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KDC384217 Traditionally considered to be the source of the River Thames near Cirencester; illustration from 'History of the Thames' published in 1793 by J. & J. Boydell, London; engraved by J.C. Stadler;
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STC156057 house owned by Horace Walpole (1717-97); more than 10 architects built the house;
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GHL267910
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XCF271638
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AGN265329
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GHL266789
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GHL266790
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DAH238579
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PFH1181028 Salt, the son of a physician, was born in Lichfield. He trained as a portrait painter, first in Lichfield and then in London under Joseph Farington and John Hoppner. In 1802 he was appointed secretary and draughtsman to George Annesley, Viscount Valentia. They started on an eastern tour, traveling to India via the Cape. Salt explored the Red Sea area, and in 1805 visited the Ethiopian highlands. He returned to England in 1806. Salt's paintings from the trip were used to the Lord Valentia's Voyages and Travels to India, published in 1809.
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Total de Resultados: 56

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