词条 | Thomas Medland |
释义 |
LifeMedland lived in London for many years, practising both line engraving and in aquatint. He was known for landscape work, and was mainly employed on topographical plates. When Haileybury College was founded by the East India Company in 1806, Medland was appointed drawing-master there, and from that time lived in the neighbourhood of Hertford. He died at Hertford 30 October 1833.{{sfn|O'Donoghue|1894}} WorksMedland engraved plates for:
Medland was successful with a set of illustrations to Robinson Crusoe from designs by Thomas Stothard (1790). His largest plate was Evening of the Glorious First of June, after Robert Cleveley. Among his aquatints were the series of nineteen plates of Egyptian monuments in the British Museum, after William Alexander (1807), and those in Charles Gold's Oriental Drawings (1806).{{sfn|O'Donoghue|1894}} Medland also practised water-colour painting, and exhibited views of London at the Royal Academy in 1777 and 1779, and later many English scenes. He continued to show drawings at the Royal Academy until 1822.{{sfn|O'Donoghue|1894}} References1. ^{{cite ODNB|id=18498|title=Medland, Thomas|first=Eleanor|last=Tollfree}} 2. ^{{cite journal|jstor=1586693|title=A Repton Garden at Haileybury|first=R. G. C.|last=Desmond|work=Garden History|volume=6|issue=Summer, number 2|year=1978|pages=16–19 }}
External links{{commons category}}
4 : British draughtsmen|English engravers|1755 births|1833 deaths |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。