Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Thomas Gibson (artist)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Thomas Gibson


Role
  
Artist

Thomas Gibson (artist)

Mark thomas gibson


Thomas Gibson (born London, c. 1680; died London, 28 April 1751) was an English painter and copyist.

Contents

Thomas Gibson (artist) Mark Thomas Gibson Artists Fredericks Freiser

Thomas gibson art gonzalez and jay warren metroflex fort worth


Life

Thomas Gibson (artist) Mark Thomas Gibson

He was an established portrait painter by 1711, when he was appointed a founding director of Godfrey Kneller's Academy in London; among his pupils there was George Vertue. Gibson's sitters included a number of important public figures: Dr Henry Sacheverell (1710; Oxford, Magdalen Coll.), John Flamsteed (1712; Oxford, Bodleian Lib.), Sir Robert Walpole (untraced; engr. G. Bockman), Archbishop William Wake (Oxford, Christ Church Pict. Gal.) and Archbishop John Potter (London, Lambeth Pal.). His most constant patron was John Poulett, 1st Earl Poulett (1663–1743), who commissioned a great number of originals and copies.

Gibson's career was interrupted in 1729-31 by serious illness, and he was obliged to sell his collection and for a time retire to Oxford. After resuming his practice he was patronized by Augusta, Princess of Wales, who in 1742 commissioned a group portrait of her four children, as well as her own portrait (both British Royal Col.).

References

Thomas Gibson (artist) Wikipedia