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Thomas Wright

(1792-1849), Painter and engraver

Artist associated with 44 portraits
Served an apprenticeship with Henry Meyer. In around 1817, he began to practise independently as a stipple engraver and executed portraits in pencil and miniature. He made plates for Mrs Anna Jameson's The Beauties of the Court of King Charles II (1831-33) and also some of the plates, after Holbein, Walker and van Dyck, for Edmund Lodge's Portraits of Illustrious Personages of Great Britain (1823-34). Wright spent time in Russia: from 1822-1826 and for fifteen years from 1830, working under court patronage. There he brought out a series of portraits entitled Les Contemporains Russes, drawn and engraved by himself and published in St Petersburg.

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