Thomas Hill (painter, 1661–1734) explained

Thomas Hill (painter, 1661–1734) should not be confused with Thomas Hill (painter).

Thomas Hill
Death Place:Mitcham
Nationality:British
Occupation:Painter

Thomas Hill (1661–1734) was a British portrait painter.

Biography

Hill was born in 1661, first learned drawing from William Faithorne the elder, the engraver. He painted numerous portraits at the beginning of the eighteenth century, some of which were engraved in mezzotint by John Smith and others. Among them were George Hooper, bishop of Bath and Wells, Baron de Ginkel, Sir Henry Goodricke, bart., Lady Goodricke, and a group of three children of the Duke of Leeds. He painted three portraits of Humphrey Wanley: one is in the Bodleian Library, Oxford; another, dated 18 December 1711, is in the collection of the Society of Antiquaries, ‘painted in a peculiarly soft and ornamental manner;’ and a third, painted in 1717, is in the National Portrait Gallery. Hill died at Mitcham in 1734.