return to artnet.com
 search artnet
Thomas Williams Fine Art Ltd Home Artists Exhibitions Art Fairs Inventory Publications Gallery Info

George Romney    (British, 1734-1802)

 George Romney - Death of a Young Woman (Works on Paper (Drawings, Watercolors etc.)) h: 16 x w: 24 in / h: 40.6 x w: 61 cm
George Romney
Death of a Young Woman
 
 George Romney - Jupiter seated on his Globe with a female Figure facing him, a group of classical Figures beyond (recto); Two Costume Studies, a Study of a female Head and a Study of Drapery (verso) (Works on Paper (Drawings, Watercolors etc.))
George Romney
Jupiter seated on his Globe with a female Figure facing him, a group of classical Figures beyond (recto); Two Costume Studies, a Study of a female Head and a Study of Drapery (verso)
 
 

Biography
George Romney was born in Lancashire into a large family of eleven children. His father was a cabinet maker by trade and George worked in the family business from the age of ten. In 1755 he was apprenticed to a portrait painter Christopher Steel and acquired knowledge in preparing colours and mixing. He moved and studied in London and became a success exhibiting and being awarded at the Free Society in 1763 for his ‘The Death of General Wolfe’. The artist in more recent times is acknowledged as ranking next after Reynolds and Gainsborough in the late eighteenth century British Portrait School (Watson, 1985).
©2007 artnet - The art world online. All rights reserved. artnet is a registered trademark of artnet Worldwide Corporation, New York, NY.