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Chelsea Pensioners Reading the Gazette of the Battle of Waterloo Painting ID:: 28151
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Sir David Wilkie Chelsea Pensioners Reading the Gazette of the Battle of Waterloo 1818-22
Oil on canvas 97 x 158 cm
(38 1/4 x 621/4in)
Wellington Museum Apsley House,London (mk63)
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Reading the Will Painting ID:: 33927
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Sir David Wilkie Reading the Will mk87
1820
Oil on panel
76x115cm
Munich,Bayerische Staatsgemalde-sammlungen,Neue Pinakothek
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Reading the Will Painting ID:: 40662
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Sir David Wilkie Reading the Will mk156
1820
Oil on canvas
76x115cm
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Chelsea Pensioners Reading the Waterloo Dispatch Painting ID:: 43923
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Sir David Wilkie Chelsea Pensioners Reading the Waterloo Dispatch 1818-22
Oil on canvas,
97 x 158 cm
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Josephine and the Fortune-Teller Painting ID:: 43926
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Sir David Wilkie Josephine and the Fortune-Teller 1837
Oil on canvas,
211 x 158 cm
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Sir David Wilkie
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1785-1841
British Sir David Wilkie Galleries
Wilkie may have inherited his rectitude and tenacity, even his nervous inhibitions, from his father, the minister of his native parish. Though little responsive to schooling, he showed an early inclination towards mimicry that expressed itself in drawings, chiefly of human activity. In these he was influenced by a copy of Allan Ramsay pastoral comedy in verse, the Gentle Shepherd (1725), illustrated by David Allan in 1788. One of the few surviving examples of his early drawings represents a scene from it (c. 1797; Kirkcaldy, Fife, Mus. A.G.). Wilkie cherished the demotic spirit of this book and its illustrations throughout his life. |
Related Artists::. | Christian-Bernard Rode | Thomas Mann Baynes | Ernest Laurent | |
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