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Francis Davison (c. 1575 –1616) was an English lawyer, poet and anthologist. He was made a member of Gray's Inn in 1593; travelled in Italy in 1595; contributed some of its best poems to A Poetical Rapsody in 1602; and left in manuscript metrical translations from the Psalms, Tabula Analytlca Poetica, and some historical pamphlets.
Francis Davison (1919–1984) was a British visual artist and painter. His later work, starting shortly after his marriage to Margaret Mellis in 1948, is characterised by the use of collage: coloured printed paper layered and mounted on board. [1] Davison remained in relative obscurity until finding recognition in the late 1970s and early 80s.
Francis Davison (poet) (c. 1575–1616), English lawyer, poet and anthologist This page was last edited on 12 July 2024, at 15:06 (UTC). Text is available under the ...
A Poetical Rhapsody (original spelling: A Poetical Rapsodie) is an Elizabethan verse miscellany compiled by Francis Davison with contributions by an unidentified ‘A. W.’ which went through four editions: 1602, 1608, 1611, and 1621. [1]
The anonymous poet A.W. is responsible for the long poem "Complaint", printed in A Poetical Rapsody, a volume issued in 1602 by two brothers, Francis and Walter Davison. [1] In the Rapsody the poem is ascribed to Francis Davison, but in Davison's own manuscript, to "A. W.".
Francis Danby (1793–1861) Charles Robert Leslie (1794–1859) Sir William Charles Ross (1794–1860) Henry Collen (1797–1879) Paul Delaroche (1797–1856) Joseph Stannard (1797–1830) Frederick Richard Lee (1798–1879) Thomas Witlam Atkinson (1799–1861) Samuel Atkins, marine painter
A Francis Bacon painting of Lucian Freud has sold for £43.4 million on its auction debut, making it the most valuable single panel piece by the artist, according to Sotheby’s.
Francis Davison, m.1948-1984, his death. Margaret Nairne Mellis (22 January 1914 – 17 March 2009) was a Scottish artist, one of the early members and last survivors of the group of modernist artists that gathered in St Ives , in Cornwall , in the 1940s. [ 1 ]