RA Collection: People and Organisations
The Royal Academy’s first president, Joshua Reynolds, was considered the leading portrait painter of his day and a key figure in the Academy. Still in print today, and widely translated, his groundbreaking Discourses in Art were hugely influential on the development of British art.
The son of a Devonshire reverend and schoolmaster, Reynolds received a comprehensive education before being apprenticed to the portrait painter Thomas Hudson aged 17. In 1749, he was invited to join the HMS Centurion on a voyage to the Mediterranean; Reynolds disembarked in Rome and stayed there for two years, studying the Old Masters. While in Rome he suffered from a bad cold which left him partially deaf so that he often carried an ear trumpet round with him, and was often depicted carrying the trumpet.
Soon after his return, Reynolds set up a studio in London and quickly established himself as a sought-after portrait painter, making important aristocratic connections in the process. His circle of friends included 18th-century notables such as the writer Dr Samuel Johnson, actor and playwright David Garrick and statesman Edmund Burke. He painted memorable portraits of all of them.
Reynolds played a central role in organising the group of 34 artists and architects who signed a petition to found a Royal Academy of Arts, which was to hold annual exhibitions of living artists’ work (now known as the Summer Exhibition) and establish a free art school. After King George III approved the petition, Reynolds was unanimously elected the Academy’s President and knighted the following year. However, Reynolds was not a court favourite and painted the King only once, in a commission for the opening of the Royal Academy’s first official home at Somerset House in 1780.
Between 1769 and 1790, Reynolds set out his theories on art in a series of fifteen lectures in the Royal Academy Schools, published as Discourses on Art. He argued that painters should look to classical and Renaissance art as their model and should seek to idealise nature rather than copy it, setting out what would become known as the “grand manner” of painting. Reynolds positioned paintings of epic, historic scenes as the highest genre of art, despite the fact that high demand for his portraits meant that he rarely painted them himself.
Reynolds used his knowledge of the Old Masters to invigorate many of his portraits. His full-length portrait of Captain Keppel depicting the naval commander energetically striding forward is actually based on the classical statue of the Apollo Belvedere. Some artists such as Nathanial Hone felt he was too reliant of Old Masters and painted a picture titled The Conjurer in which prints of Old Masters whirl around the conjurer which was a veiled reference to his practice. Another Royal Academician, Thomas Gainsborough, fell out with Reynolds for years before seeking reconciliation on his deathbed, writing that he had always “admired and sincerely loved Sir Joshua Reynolds”.
Reynolds’s death was greatly mourned. When he died in 1792, Edmund Burke’s eulogy honoured him as “the first Englishman who added the praise of the elegant arts to the other glories of his country”. His body lay in the Royal Academy before being moved to St. Paul’s Cathedral and the procession included ninety one carriages carrying many distinguished persons, and was followed by all the Academicians and students from the RA Schools. There is a statue by Alfred Drury, installed in 1931 and around this statue which still greets visitors to the Royal Academy today. The fountains and lights arranged around the statue reflect the alignment of planets, the moon and stars at midnight on the night of Reynolds’s birth.
RA Collections Decolonial Research Project - Extended Case Study
According to an account by the abolitionist Thomas Clarkson, Reynolds stated his opposition to the slave-trade at a dinner with friends around 1787. Clarkson had shown the group samples of African cloth, and Reynolds ‘gave his unqualified approbation of the abolition of this cruel traffic’ (see Notes, 1). Reynolds also supported through subscription the second edition of the anti-slavery tract written by Ottobah Cugoano, Thoughts and sentiments on the evil of slavery (1791) (see Notes, 2). Cugoano had been a servant in the household of the artists Richard and Maria Cosway, and through the Cosways had met many prominent artists, writers and politicians.
Reynolds had a Black servant who appears to have joined his household around the mid-1760s. Unlike Cugoano, however, his name is not recorded despite the artist and writer James Northcote suggesting that the servant modelled for several of Reynolds’ paintings (see Notes, 3). Northcote stated that the man had been brought to Britain (presumably from the Caribbean) by the wife of Valentine Morris, a British landowner and politician who also owned plantations in Antigua and who was Governor of St Vincent from 1772-79. There are, however, inconsistencies and conflicting chronologies in this account (see Notes, 4).
Reynolds’ servant is described in Northcote’s Memoirs in connection with an incident in which he was the victim of a crime. After accompanying an elderly lady who had dined with Reynolds to her home, he met some friends and found himself locked out on his return. He spent the night at a watch-house – an early form of a police station that also provided overnight accommodation for those unexpectedly with nowhere to sleep – where his watch was stolen by one of the ‘miserable company’ there. The thief was charged, with the servant as witness, and Northcote recalls that Reynolds learnt of this from reading an account of the Old Bailey proceedings in a newspaper (see Notes, 5). Hearing that the thief was to be condemned to death, Reynolds became angry with his servant and made him deliver his own food to the thief in prison, ‘as a penance’. Meanwhile, Reynolds successfully asked Edmund Burke to have the thief’s sentence changed to transportation.
The same servant was said to be the model for the groom in the portrait of John Manners, Marquis of Granby (c.1766-70). This is one of a number of paintings by Reynolds which depict Black people, mostly as servants in portraits of wealthy white patrons, for example The Temple Family (1780-2), a portrait of Frederick William Ernest, Count of Schaumburg-Lippe, and a portrait of Lieutenant Paul Henry Ourry MP (c.1748). The Black model depicted as the groom in the latter painting has been identified as ‘Jersey’, but he was not Reynolds’ servant (see Notes, 6).
The following paragraph includes offensive language cited from an archival document. The original wording has been used to preserve its historical significance.
A Black servant also features in Lady Elizabeth Keppel (1761). Details of eight appointments with Lady Keppel are recorded in Reynolds’ sitters’ book for 1761 (Reynolds used these books to log his sitters throughout his career – see Notes, 7). In December 1761, there are two separate appointments to capture the likeness of her female servant; Reynolds records these with the word ‘negro’ rather than recording her name. Such disregard for people of colour and their individuality was common in British society at this time.
Reynolds’ most famous depiction of a Black person is the portrait thought to show Francis Barber, the servant and heir of the lexicographer Samuel Johnson. The unfinished portrait, now in the Menil Collection, Houston, casts Barber as a romantic, almost heroic, figure against a stormy sky. The identity of the sitter is not completely certain, and it may even portray Reynolds’ own servant, but the careful treatment of the subject implies that Reynolds – or the person who commissioned the painting – held this sitter in high esteem. By the 1770s when this portrait was painted, Barber was likely assisting Johnson with revising his Dictionary of the English Language and it is possible that he commissioned the portrait of Barber, whom he held in great affection.
Interestingly, there are several versions of the original painting of Barber by Reynolds, copies by later artists and those in Reynolds’ immediate circle. It may be that Reynolds encouraged his students to copy and learn from this portrait. The original was also exhibited at the British Institution in 1813, when it would have been seen and possibly reproduced by many artists (see Notes, 8).
Notes
Thomas Clarkson, History of the Rise, Progress, and Accomplishment of the Abolition of the African Slave Trade (London, 1839), I:160-1; https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/TheHistoryoftheRiseProgressand_Acc/gKgNAAAAQAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=0 (accessed 2 March 2022).
Ottobah Cugoano, Thoughts and sentiments on the evil or slavery; Or, the nature of servitude as admitted by the law of God, compared to the modern slavery of the Africans in the West-Indies; in an answer to the advocates for slavery and oppression. Addressed to the sons of Africa, by a native (London, 1791); James Northcote, Memoirs of Sir Joshua Reynolds (London, 1813), p. 117; https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CB0126566527/ECCO?u=lonlib&sid=bookmark-ECCO&xid=f994b30d&pg=1 (accessed March 2, 2022).
https://archive.org/details/memoirsofsirjosh00nortrich/page/116/mode/2up (accessed 2 March 2022).
James Northcote, Memoirs of Sir Joshua Reynolds (London, 1813), pp. 117-18; https://archive.org/details/memoirsofsirjosh00nortrich/page/116/mode/2up (accessed 2 March 2022). The chronology of events is difficult to determine due to inconsistencies in the biographies of Valentine Morris, his wife Mary Mordaunt and his daughter. Although according to Northcote, Reynolds’ Black servant was brought to England by Morris and entered Reynolds’ service after Morris’ death, this does not seem possible given that the anecdote described in his Memoirs is said to have taken place around 1768-9 but Morris died in 1789.
A search of the Old Bailey proceedings online has so far failed to identify this case and therefore the name of the servant remains unknown.
Nicholas Penny (ed.), Reynolds (1986), p. 173.
Joshua Reynolds’ pocket book for 1761, RA Archive reference code REY/1/5; https://www.royalacademy.org.uk/art-artists/archive/pocket-book-4?allfields=book&archivetitlefond=2.01.OG&date=&form=archives&index=6&name=&referencecode=&total_entries=29&utf8=%E2%9C%93 (accessed 7 March 2022).
https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/reynolds-a-young-black-man-francis-barber-t01892 (accessed 7 March 2022).
Relevant ODNB entries
Postle, Martin. “Reynolds, Sir Joshua (1723–1792), portrait and history painter and art theorist.” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. 23 Sep. 2004; Accessed 2 Mar. 2022. https://www-oxforddnb-com.lonlib.idm.oclc.org/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-23429.
Foundation Member
Born: 16 July 1723 in Plympton, Devon, England, United Kingdom
Died: 23 February 1792
Nationality: British
Elected RA: 10 December 1768
President from: 1768 - 1792
Gender: Male
Preferred media: Painting
Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Lavinia, Countess Spencer
Mixed method engraving
Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Lavinia, Countess Spencer
Mixed method engraving
Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Portrait of Francis Hayman, R.A., 1756
Oil on canvas
Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Theory, 1779-1780
Oil on canvas
Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Studio Experiments in Colour and Media
Oil on canvas
Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Portrait of Queen Charlotte, 1779
Oil on canvas
Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Portrait of Giuseppe Marchi, 1753
Oil on canvas
Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Portrait of King George III, 1779
Oil on canvas
Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Portrait of Sir William Chambers, R.A., ca. 1780
Oil on panel
Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Self-portrait of Sir Joshua Reynolds, PRA, ca. 1780
Oil on panel
Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Spectacles belonging to Joshua Reynolds
Metal spectacles in a burgundy and brown leather case
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Garrick Between Tragedy and Comedy, after Sir Joshua Reynolds, 1 December 1811
Stipple engraving
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Portrait of Sir Joshua Reynolds, 20 January 1811
Stipple engraving
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Portrait of John, Marquis of Granby, 1 December 1810
Stipple engraving
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Portrait of John Dunning, Lord Ashburton, 4 June 1809
Stipple engraving
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Portrait of Oliver Goldsmith, 1 December 1770
Mezzotint
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Portrait of Sir William Chambers RA, 1 March 1785
Stipple-engraving
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Portrait of Giuseppe Baretti, 6 March 1794
Stipple engraving
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Portrait of George III, 18 June 1789
Stipple engraving
William Blake
The Graphic Muse, 21 February 1806
Line engraving with stipple
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Portrait of Samuel Johnson, 1 January 1787
Line engraving
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Portrait of Angelica Kauffman, R.A., 3 September 1780
Stipple engraving
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Portrait of James Boswell, c. 1825?
Stipple engraving
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Portrait of Miss Theophila Palmer, 14 July 1785
Stipple engraving
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Self portrait, 1 March 1789
Stipple engraving
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Self-portrait, 1 February 1795
Mezzotint
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Self-portrait, 10 July 1770
Mezzotint
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
James Paine, Architect and James Paine Jun., [1767]
Mezzotint
Francis Haward ARA
Mrs. Siddons in the character of the Tragic Muse, 4 June 1787
Stipple-engraving
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Sir Jeffery Amherst, [1766?]
Mezzotint
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Self-portrait, 1 December 1780
Mezzotint
James Ward RA
Mrs. Billington as St. Cecilia, 10 January 1803
Mezzotint
Francis Haward ARA
George, Prince of Wales, 18 January 1793
Stipple-engraving
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
The Holy Family, 12 August 1792
Line-engraving
William Say
Cupid and Psyche, 1814
Mezzotint
William Say
The Society of Dilettanti, [April 1821]
Mezzotint
Charles Turner ARA
The Society of Dilettanti, [April 1821]
Mezzotint
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Sir William Chambers, K.P.S., Treasurer of the Royal Academy, 1 December 1780
Mezzotint
After Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Portrait of Samuel Johnson, 1770
Mezzotint
Joseph Grozer
The Death of Dido, 30 May 1796
Mezzotint
After Henry Thomson RA
The Infant Hercules, ?1790s
Oil on canvas
François Vivares
Jupiter and Europa, 10 April 1771
Line engraving
Attributed to Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Lady with a Fan, ca. 1746
Oil on panel
Giacomo De' Rossi
Letterpressed title-page of the latin descriptions of the plates, 1672
Pietro Santi Bartoli
Plate 119: Other war trophies of the Emperor Trajan, 1672
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Plate 118: War trophies of the Emperor Trajan, 1672
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Plate 117: Latin inscriptions celebrating the victory over the Dacians, 1672
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Plate 116: other series of coins celebrating the victory over the Dacians, 1672
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Plate 115: Coins celebrating the victory over the Dacians, 1672
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Plate 114: Dacian cattle , 1672
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Plate 113: Dacian families migrating to another territories, 1672
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Plate 112: Roman soldiers setting fire to the Dacian fortifications , 1672
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Plate 111: Roman soldiers imprisoning some Dacian soldiers, 1672
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Plate 110: Roman soldiers making Dacian prisoners , 1672
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Plate 109: Roman soldiers capturing the Dacian officials, 1672
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Plate 108: Roman soldiers capturing the Dacian officials, 1672
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Plate 107: the Dacian cavalry fleeing the Romans, 1672
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Plate 106: Roman cavalry chasing the Decian cavalry, 1672
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Plate 105: a group of Dacians surrendering to Trajan and bringign gifts, 1672
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Plate 104: Decebalus addressing the Dacians; and Decebalus stabbing himself to death, 1672
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Plate 103: Emperor Trajan standing addressing two Roman legions while some soldiers carry Decebalus'treasures , 1672
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Plate 102: Dacians fleeing after being defeated , 1672
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Plate 101: Dacians assaulting a Roman fortress, 1672
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Plate 100: Dacians leaving their fortifications in order to attack the Romans , 1672
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Plate 99: Dacian ambassadors kneeling before Emperor Trajan asking for peace, 1672
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Plate 97: Roman soldiers listening to Emperor Trajan's speech , 1672
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Plate 96: Roman soldier distributing wheat to other soldiers, 1672
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Plate 95: a group of Dacians at right kneeling and asking for Trajan's clemence , 1672
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Plate 94: Dacians running out of the city and askign for clemence , 1672
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Plate 93: Dacians poisoning themself after their defeat, 1672
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Plate 92: Dacians setting fire to one of their city, 1672
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Plate 91: a Dacian kneeling before emperor Trajan at centre, 1672
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Plate 90: Roman soldiers cutting trees and making piles of wood, 1672
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Plate 89: Roman soldiers destroying a Dacian fortress, 1672
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Plate 88: Dacian soldiers stop the pace of Trajan's troops coming to the rescue, 1672
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Plate 87: a Roman soldier informing Emperor Trajan about the battle with the Dacians, 1672
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Plate 86: Roman soldiers attempting to climb the Dacian defense wall, 1672
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Plate 85: Battle between Roman and Dacian soldiers , 1672
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Plate 84: Dacians presiding their camps, 1672
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Plate 83: Troops harvesting the crops, 1672
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Plate 82: Continued march of the armies, 1672
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Plate 81: Veteran soldiers and Romans with musical instruments , 1672
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Plate 80: Emperor Trajan sending his soldiers to battler, 1672
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Plate 79: Emperor trajan addressing the Roman soldiers, 1672
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Plate 78: two men bringing the bull, the ram and the pork for the sacrifice , 1672
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Plate 77: a sacrifice in honour of emperor Trajan's arrival, 1672
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Plate 76: Emperor Trajan and Hadrian leading the Roman army , 1672
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Plate 75: Dacian and Sarmatian soldiers sent to Emperor Trajan in order to establish the condition for the peace, 1672
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Plate 74: Emperor Trajan followed by veterans; and Trajan performing a sacrifice, 1672
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Plate 73: Emperor Trajan on horseback leading the Roman cavalry, 1672
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Plate 72: Roman soldiers occupying Dacian fortifications, 1672
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Plate 71: Dacian soldiers attaching a Roman camp, 1672
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Plate 70: Dacian soldiers guarding a city, 1672
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Plate 69: a group of men cutting trees and consolidating buildings, 1672
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Plate 68: Romans and Dacians assist to a sacrifice performed by the Emperor Trajan, 1672
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Plate 67: Iazyges greeting Emperor Trajan; and Trajan performing a sacrifice, 1672
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Plate 66: Roman sacerdotes following a Roman cavalry , 1672
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Plate 65: Emperor Trajan land on the shore and advabce by land, 1672
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Plate 64: Emperor Trajan making a sacrifice to Jupiter, 1672
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Plate 63: a group of Roman soldiers greeting emperor Trajan, 1672
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Plate 62: emperor Trajan entering a Roman town through a triumphal arch
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Plate 61: a group of Romans greeting the Emperor Trajan, 1672
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Plate 60: Romans making sacrifice in honour of emperor Trajan, 1672
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Plate 59: Emperor Trajan leaving for the Second Dacian War, 1672
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Plate 58: the personification of Victory writing on a shield , 1672
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Plate 57: Emperor Trajan and Decebalus addressing the Thirteenth Legion, 1672
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Plate 56: Dacian officials kneeling before Emperor Trajan while castles and fortifications are demolished, 1672
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Plate 55: Decebalus and the Dacians kneeling before Emperor Trajan askign for clemence, 1672
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Plate 54: Emperor Trajan establishing peace with the Decebalus, 1672
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Plate 52: Last battle between Dacians and Romans , 1672
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Plate 51: Roman soldiers bringing two heads of Dacian prisoners before emperor Trajan, 1672
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Plate 50: Dacians being defeated by the Romans soldiers , 1672
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Plate 49: Dacians ambushing Roman soldiers while cutting trees in the forests, 1672
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Plate 48: Roman soldiers cutting trees and building new camps, 1672
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Plate 47: Dacians fighting the Roman and Sarmatian soldiers , 1672
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Plate 46: Roman and Sarmatian soldiers fighting the Dacians , 1672
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Plate 45: Emperor Trajan receiving two Dacians while Roman soldiers build new fortifications, 1672
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Plate 44: The defeated Dacians seek shelter in the forests, 1672
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Plate 42: Praetorian guards, 1672
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Plate 40: emperor Trajan on horseback, and Roman soldiers building camps, 1672
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Plate 38: Emperor Trajan addressing the soldiers, 1672
Pietro Santi Bartoli
Plate 37: Emperor Trajan sacrificing a pork, a ram, and a bull, 1672
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Plate 36: Emperor Trajan receiving the Dacian ambassadors, Roman soldiers building fortifications, 1672
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Plate 35: Emperor Trajan discussing with soldiers a plan to fight the enemies, 1672
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Plate 34: Emperor Trajan leading the army ouside the camp to fight , 1672
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Plate 33: Emperor Trajan distributing the congiary; Dacian women torturing Roman prisoners with torches, allies of the Romans bringing provisions, 1672
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Plate 32: Dacian soldiers being defeated by the Roman soldiers, 1672
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Plate 31: Dacian soldiers being defeated by the Roman soldiers, 1672
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Plate 30: Roman soldiers preparing for the fourth battle with the Dacians / engraved plate from Colonna Traiana by Pietro Santi Bartoli, published by Giacomo de Rossi (Rome, 1672), 1672
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Plate 29: Dacian soldiers being received by Trajan, Roman soldiers are consolidating walls, doctors are giving assistance , 1672
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Plate 28: Battle between Romna soldiers and Decians, 1672
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Plate 27: Sarmatian cavalry fleeing the Roman army, 1672
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Plate 26: Emperor Trajan on horseback leading his army against Decebal, 1672
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Plate 25: The emperor Trajan's landing, 1672
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Plate 24: emperor Trajan entering the city in a boat , 1672
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Plate 23: Dacians besieging Roman a fortress and Romans bringing provisions, 1672
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Plate 22: Dacians being caught in a swollen river, the Sarmatian cavalry attacking a Roman fortress, 1672
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Plate 21: Dacians defeted, Emperor Trajan ordering his soldiers to free the women and the children, 1672
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Plate 19: battle scene with Dacians Dacians fleeing and the Romans and victorious Roman soldiers crossing Tisa river with trophies, 1672
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Plate 18: Dacian and Roman soldiers asking for Jupiter's protection, a group of men at centre carrying the dead body of a Dacian prisoner, 1672
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Plate 17: Roman soldiers at right presenting two heads of Dacian prisoners before emperor Trajans, 1672
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Plate 16: Roman soldiers cutting trees and another group wearing armour and carrying war trophies, 1672
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Plate 15: A group of Roman soldiers on horseback crossing a wooden bridge, and Roman soldiers in armour, 1672
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Plate 53: Emperor Trajan determining the conditions for a peace treatise with the Decebalus, 1672
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Plate 14: Roman soldiers building fortifications, soldiers holding the horses of the emperor, and soldiers guarding the Porta Pretoria, 1672
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Plate 13: two Dacian prisoners being presented before Emperor Trajan while other soldiers building fortifications, 1672
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Plate 12: Emperor Trajan observing the fortifications built by the Roman soldiers, 1672
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Plate 11: Emperor Trajan sending explorers and soldiers cutting trees, 1672
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Plate 10: Emperor Trajan supervises the works at the camp with a Prefect and a Tribun, 1672
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Plate 9: soldiers building a camp, 1672
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Plate 8: Emperor Trajan addressing the soldiers, 1672
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Plate 7: Emperor Trajan making a sacrifice, 1672
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Plate 6: Emperor Trajan sitting on a camp stool discussing with Lucio Prefetto , 1672
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Plate 5: Roman soldiers marching carrying war trophies, led by soldiers on horseback, 1672
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Plate 4: the statue of river Danube and the army crossing the river on a bridge made of boats, 1672
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Plate 3: 'Scapha vinaria', boats for transporting wine, oil and grain to the fortifications, 1672
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Plate 2: Praetorian soldiers and fortifications, 1672
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Plate 1: granary, heap of wood for fortifications, bundles of horse feed, castles , 1672
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Right and left sides of the column plinth showing the 'Throphies', 1672
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Front and back sides of the column plinth showing the 'Throphies', 1672
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Elevation and interior section of the top of the column, 1672
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Elevation and interior section of the body of the column, 1672
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Elevation and interior section of the base of the column, 1672
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Colonna Traiana, 1672
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Plate 20: Emperor Trajan receiving the Dacian envoy, 1672
Giorgio Vasari
Stamp of Jacopo Giunti (from Giorgio Vasari, Le Vite De' Piu Eccellenti Pittori, Scultori, E Architettori), 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Perino del Vaga, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Sebastiano Veneziano, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Giulio Romano, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Antonio da Sangallo, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Marcantonio Raimondi, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Valerio Vicentino, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Baccio D'Agnolo, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Francesco Granacci, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Liberale da Verona, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Palma il Giovane, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Parmigianino, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Border for a portrait of Marco Calabrese, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Morto da Feltre, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Franciabigio, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Bartolomeo Ramenghi, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Rosso Fiorentino, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Polidoro da Caravaggio, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Girolamo da Treviso, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Giovanni Antonio Sogliani, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Il Pordenone, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Alfonso Lombardi , 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Properzia de' Rossi, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Giovan Francesco Penni, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Baldassarre Peruzzi, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Lorenzo Lotti, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Lorenzo di Credi, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Baccio da Montelupo, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Benedetto da Rovezzano, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Andrea dal Monte Sansovino, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Vincenzo Tamagni , 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Andrea Ferrucci, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Domenico Puligo, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Simone del Pollaiolo ( Il Cronaca), 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Guillaume de Marcillat, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Raphael (Raffaello Sanzio), 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Giuliano da Sangallo, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Decorative frame for portrait of Pietro Torrigiano , 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Raffaellino del Garbo, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Andrea del Sarto, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Mariotto Albertinelli, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Fra Bartolomeo, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Donato Bramante, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Piero di Cosimo, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Decorative frame for portrait of Correggio, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Giorgione, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Giorgio Vasari
Leonardo da Vinci, 1791 [-1795]
Woodcut on laid paper
Unidentified photographer
A group of 110 photographs of sculpture by Francis Derwent Wood R.A.
Giuseppe Ceracchi
Bust of Sir Joshua Reynolds, P.R.A., ca. 1778
Marble
Unknown
Cast of a bust of Sir Joshua Reynolds, P.R.A., ca. 1778
Plaster cast
Conrad Martin Metz
Madonna and Child from the Cupola of the church of St. John at Parma attributed to Correggio, 1789
Etching and aquatint
Conrad Martin Metz
Madonna and Child attributed to Correggio, 1789
Crayon-manner etching
Conrad Martin Metz
Study of a nude bearded man seen half-length attributed to Carlo Cignani , 1789
Crayon-manner etching
Conrad Martin Metz
Study of Icarus (?) attributed to Rubens, 1789
Crayon-manner etching
Conrad Martin Metz
Parmigianino's 'Madonna of St Margaret' , 1789
Etching
Conrad Martin Metz
Madonna and Child with Saint John the Baptist /, 1789
Etching and aquatint printed in colour
Conrad Martin Metz
Studies of man (front and back), harm, and head of a horse , 1789
Etching and aquatint printed in colour
Ivory miniature of Joshua Reynolds
Watercolour on ivory
Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA, 1723-1792.
A discourse, delivered to the students of the Royal Academy, on the distribution of the prizes, December 11, 1769, by the President [Sir Joshua Reynolds] - London: 1769
14/3025
Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
The Discourses Of Sir Joshua Reynolds; Illustrated By Explanatory Notes & Plates By John Burnet, F.R.S. - London.: 1842.
07/1662
Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
The Literary Works Of Sir Joshua Reynolds, First President Of The Royal Academy. To Which Is Prefixed, A Memoir Of The Author; With Remarks On His Professional Character, Illustrative Of His Principles And Practice. By Henry William Beechey. In Two Volumes. Vol. I. (II.) - London:: 1835.
05/5039
Sir Joshua Reynolds PRA
Sir Joshua Reynolds' Notes And Observations On Pictures, Chiefly Of The Venetian School, Being Extracts From His Italian Sketch Books; Also, The Rev. W. Mason's Observations On Sir Joshua's Method Of Coloring. And Some Unpublished Letters Of Dr. Johnson, Malone, And Others. With An Appendix, Containing A Transcript Of Sir Joshua's Account Book, Showing What Pictures He Painted And The Prices Paid For Them. Edited By William Cotton, Esq. - London:: [1859]
05/4008