Samuel Dixon (artist) explained

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.

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Samuel Dixon, Water-Colour Painter. 1913. A Dictionary of Irish Artists. 28 August 2016.
  2. Web site: A George III Irish embossed Bird Picture by Samuel Dixon. Bonhams. 28 August 2016.
  3. A Dictionary of Irish Artists. Walter G. Strickland. 1913. http://www.libraryireland.com/irishartists/index.php