- Artist: de Wint, Peter, 1784–1849 Remove
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Peter de Wint
1784–1849
(b Hanley [now part of Stoke-on-Trent], Staffordshire, 21 Jan. 1784; d London, 30 June 1849). English landscape painter of Dutch extraction. From 1802 to 1806 he was apprenticed to the engraver, miniaturist, and painter John Raphael Smith (1752–1812), and he later studied at the Royal Academy, had advice from John Varley, and frequented the house of Dr Monro.
Text Source: The Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists (Oxford University Press)
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Landscape with a Waggon Victoria and Albert Museum
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Black Gang Chine, Isle of Wight c.1843 Victoria and Albert Museum
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Lincoln from the South Usher Gallery
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Cattle in a Landscape Usher Gallery
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Cornfield with a Windmill Usher Gallery
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Landscape with a Castle Usher Gallery
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A Drover at the Edge of a Wood, Lincoln in the Distance c.1830 Usher Gallery
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Newport Arch, Lincoln Usher Gallery
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Wooded Landscape c.1815 Victoria and Albert Museum
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Carnations Usher Gallery
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Landscape with Lightning and a Hermit c.1812–1816 Victoria and Albert Museum
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Greenwich Park c.1818–1822 Victoria and Albert Museum
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John Keats (1795–1821) Usher Gallery
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A View of Lincoln from the South at Little Bargate c.1824 Usher Gallery
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The Burning of the Houses of Parliament 1834 Usher Gallery
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Portrait of the Artist's Mother Usher Gallery
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Old Houses on the High Bridge, Lincoln Victoria and Albert Museum
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Landscape with a Rainbow Usher Gallery
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Lincoln from the River at Sunset Usher Gallery
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Lincolnshire Cornfield near Horncastle 1815 Usher Gallery