John Boyne | |
---|---|
Born | 1750-1759 County Down, Ireland |
Died | 22 June 1810 Penton Place, Pentonville, London |
John Boyne (circa 1750 - 22 June 1810) was an Irish water-colour painter, engraver, and caricaturist. [1]
John Boyne born in the County Down about between 1750 and 1759. Boyne and his father moved to England when Boyne was 9 years old. He was apprenticed to William Byrne, the landscape engraver. Strickland claims that "owing to his idle and dissipated habits he was not successful" as an engraver. [2]
He was a member of a group of strolling players for a time, before returning to London in 1781. There he took up a position as a master in a drawing school and returned to art practice. Between 1788 and 1809 he exhibited 18 figure subjects and caricatures with the Royal Academy. The British Museum hold 2 drawings by him from a series of heads from Shakespeare's players, "King Lear" and "The Quack Doctor". [2] His "C. Macklin and Miss Pope as Shylock and Portia" was engraved by Nutter in 1790. The Royal Collection Trust hold a number of works by or after Boyne. [3]
He died at his home at Penton Place, Pentonville on 22 June 1810. [2]
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Events in the year 1810 in Art.
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