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17th-century portraits (9 C, 141 P) 18th-century portraits (11 C, 87 P) ... Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; ...
Self-portrait of Smith (c.1680), Worcester Art Museum Unknown man, oil on canvas, from 17th century colonial America, attributed to Thomas Smith. Thomas Smith (c. 1650 –1691) was an artist, sailor and slave trader in colonial New England.
Greenwood was the son of Samuel Greenwood (1690–1742), a Harvard graduate (1709) and merchant, and his second wife, Mary Charnock Devereux (c. 1709-1794). [3] In 1770, Greenwood wrote to his childhood friend, the painter John Singleton Copley, to commission a portrait of his mother Mary Charnock Devereux: ‘I am very desirous of seeing the good lady’s face as she now appears, with old age ...
Portrait of a Clergyman (Helmich van Thweenhuysen II) Portrait of a Family; Portrait of a Gentleman (Maíno) Portrait of a Lady (de Crayer) Portrait of a Lady (Maes) Portrait of a Seated Woman; Portrait of a Woman as Judith; Portrait of a Young Gentleman; Portrait of Abraham Grapheus; Portrait of an Actor; Portrait of Beatrice Cenci
Airbrushing and beauty filters may feel like a modern phenomenon, but conservation work to a portrait painted in the 17th century has revealed that touch-ups to images are nothing new.
Portrait of a Clergyman — sometimes called Portrait of a 17th Century Clergyman or The Unknown Clergyman — is an oil on canvas portrait painting by Guilliam de Ville (ca. 1614–1672) dated 1639. The identity of the subject, an elderly clergyman, is unknown.
About ten portraits, all painted between 1670 and 1674 and showing residents of Boston, have been attributed to the Freake Painter. [2] It has been suggested that the artist might be identified as Samuel Clement (1635–78), the son of Augustine Clement who had arrived in New England in 1635 having previously trained as a painter in England.
Pages in category "17th-century allegorical paintings" The following 38 pages are in this category, out of 38 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .