Ezekiel Abraham Ezekiel (1757–1806) was an English engraver.
Ezekiel was born at Exeter in 1757. He engraved portraits by Opie, Sir Joshua Reynolds, and others, and was also well known as a miniature painter and a scientific optician.
He died in 1806. A miniature portrait of him was exhibited at the Anglo-Jewish Historical Exhibition held in London in 1887.
Abraham Raimbach, was an English engraver of Swiss descent.
Events in the year 1811 in Art.
Events from the year 1757 in art.
John Linnell was an English engraver, and portrait and landscape painter. He was a naturalist and a rival to the artist John Constable. He had a taste for Northern European art of the Renaissance, particularly Albrecht Dürer. He also associated with the amateur artist Edward Thomas Daniell, and with William Blake, to whom he introduced the painter and writer Samuel Palmer and others of the Ancients.
Events in the year 1822 in Art.
Events from the year 1834 in art.
Events from the year 1849 in art.
Events in the year 1806 in art.
Events in the year 1803 in Art.
Events from the year 1735 in art.
Events from the year 1723 in art.
Events from the year 1751 in art.
Events from the year 1771 in art.
Events from the year 1675 in art.
Abraham van der Doort was a Dutch artist. As Keeper of Charles I's art collections, he was the first Surveyor of the King's Pictures.
John Alefounder was a painter of portraits and miniatures, working in London and later in India.
Richard Corbould was an English artist, sometimes misspelt "Corbold".
William Mineard Bennet (1778–1858), was an English miniature-painter, singer and composer.
Peter Paillou was a British artist best known for his paintings of birds, many of which were used as book illustrations.
Ezekiel is a masculine Hebrew language name, meaning "God's Strength." It can be used as both a given name and a surname.
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain : "Ezekiel, Abraham Ezekiel". Dictionary of National Biography . London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.