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See also: English painter, was See also: born at See also: Plymouth on the 22nd of See also: October 1746
.
He was apprenticed to his See also: father, a poor watchmaker of the See also: town, and during his spare See also: hours was diligent with See also: brush and pencil
.
In 1769 he See also: left his father and started as a portrait-painter
.
Four years later he went to See also: London and was admitted as a pupil into the studio and See also: house of See also: Reynolds
.
At the same See also: time he attended the See also: Academy See also: schools
.
In 1775 he left Reynolds, and about two years later, having acquired the requisite funds by portrait-See also: painting in Devonshire, he went to study in See also: Italy
.
On his return to See also: England, three years later, he revisited his native county, and then settled in London, where Opie and See also: Fuseli were his rivals
.
He was elected associate of the Academy in 1786, and full academician in the following spring
.
The " See also: Young Princes murdered in the Tower," his first important See also: historical See also: work, See also: dates from 1786, and it was followed by the " See also: Burial of the Princes in the Tower," both paintings, along with seven others, being executed for See also: Boydell's See also: Shakespeare gallery, The " See also: Death of Wat Tyler," now in the See also: Guildhall, was exhibited in 1787; and shortly afterwards See also: Northcote began a set of ten subjects, entitled " The Modest Girl and the Wanton," which were completed and engraved in 1796
.
Among the productions of Northcote's later years are the "; Entombment " and the " Agony in the Garden," besides many portraits, and several animal subjects, like the " Leopards," the " See also: Dog and Heron," and the " See also: Lion "; these latter were more successful than the artist's efforts in the higher departments of See also: art, as was indicated by Fuseli's See also: caustic remark on examining the " See also: Angel opposing Balaam "—" Northcote, you are an angel at an ass, but an ass at an angel." The See also: works of the artist number about two thousand, and he made a See also: fortune of £40,000
.
He died on the 13th of See also: July 1831
.
Northcote was emulous of fame as an author, and his first essays in literature were contributions to the Artist, edited by See also: Prince See also: Hoare
.
In 1813 he embodied his recollections of his old master in aSee also: Life of Reynolds
.
His Fables—the first series published in 1828, the second posthumously in 1833—were illustrated with woodcuts by See also: Harvey from Northcote's own designs
.
In the production of his Life of See also: Titian, his last work, which appeared in 183o, he was assisted by See also: William
See also: Hazlitt, who previously, in 1826, had given to the public in the New Monthly See also: Magazine his recollections of Northcote's pungent and cynical " conversations," the bitter personalities of which caused much trouble to the painter and his See also: friends
.
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