- Artist: de Loutherbourg, Philip James, 1740–1812 Remove
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Philip James de Loutherbourg
1740–1812
(b Strasbourg, 31 Oct. 1740; d Chiswick, Middlesex [now in Greater London], 11 Mar. 1812). French painter, stage designer, and illustrator, active mainly in England.
Text Source: The Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists (Oxford University Press)
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A Philosopher in a Moonlit Churchyard 1790 Yale Center for British Art
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Landscape Museums Sheffield
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A View near Matlock, Derbyshire with Figures Working beneath a Wooden Conveyor 1785 Yale Center for British Art
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Seascape Museum of Farnham
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Sea Battle c.1790 Museum of Farnham
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Winter Scene with Skating Maidstone Museum & Bentlif Art Gallery
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The Angel appearing to the Shepherds c. 1760–1769 The Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology
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The Battle of Camperdown 1799 Tate Britain
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Travellers Attacked by Banditti 1781 Tate
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Girl, Boy, Donkey and Chickens in a Landscape Bushey Museum, Reveley Lodge
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The Great Fire of London c.1797 Yale Center for British Art
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Britannia and Her Lions Harris Museum & Art Gallery
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Landscape with Cattle and Figures: A Storm Coming On 1781 Royal Academy of Arts
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Landscape with Figures and Cattle Bolling Hall
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A Cottage in Patterdale, Westmoreland 1783 Government Art Collection
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A Storm with Smuggler's Landing 1791 Victoria Art Gallery
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David Garrick (1717–1779), as Don John in 'The Chancers' by John Fletcher, Adapted by George Villiers 1774 Victoria and Albert Museum
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Christ Appearing to the Disciples at Emmaus 1797 Birmingham Museums Trust
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The Battle of the First of June, 1794 1795 National Maritime Museum
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Landscape with Figures 1763 Walker Art Gallery