Samuel Dixon | |
Death Place: | London |
Citizenship: | Kingdom of Great Britain |
Occupation: | Artist, printer |
Known For: | Basso-relievo prints |
Samuel Dixon (died 1769) was an Irish artist, known for his water colour paintings and his depictions of flowers and birds in Italian: [[basso-relievo print|basso-relievo]] (embossed French: [[papier-mâché]]).[1]
Dixon's father was Thomas Dixon, a hosier, of Cork Hill. His brother John Dixon, was a mezzotint engraver.
In 1748, he was listed as a "picture dealer and painter" in Capel Street, Dublin, Ireland.
Dixon produced sets of twelve hand-coloured basso-relievo prints. He advertised the first, featuring floral arrangements, in Faulkner's Dublin Journal on 26 April 1748. The next year he followed these with a set of designs copied from volumes 1–4 of George Edward's Natural History of Uncommon Birds (1743–1751).[2]
He employed a number of apprentices or pupils to hand-colour his prints, among them was Gustavus Hamilton, Daniel O'Keeffe and James Reilly.[3]
In later life he opened a shop in London and exhibited his works there, returning to Dublin in 1768. He returned to London, and died there on 27 January 1769.