Preview | Description | Notes | Content | Updated by |
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Ezra L'hommedieu 1792 Museum of Fine Arts Boston, MA | Unrated | Anonymous | ||
Daniel Boardman 1789 National Gallery of Art Washington, D.C. | Unrated | Anonymous | ||
Dr. David Rogers 1788 National Gallery of Art Washington, D.C. | Unrated | Anonymous | ||
Martha Tennent Rogers (Mrs. David Rogers) And Her Son, Probably Samuel Henry Rogers 1788 National Gallery of Art Washington, D.C. | Unrated | Anonymous | ||
Thomas Earle 1800 National Gallery of Art Washington, D.C. | Unrated | Anonymous | ||
Robert Boyd 1788 Brooklyn Museum New York, NY | Unrated | Anonymous | ||
Clarissa Seymour (Later Mrs. Truman Marsh) 1789 Brooklyn Museum New York, NY | Unrated | Anonymous | ||
Mrs. Joseph Wright 1792 Smithsonian American Art Museum Washington, D.C. | Unrated | Anonymous | ||
Mrs. Richard Alsop 1792 Smithsonian American Art Museum Washington, D.C. | Unrated | Anonymous | ||
Portrait Of A Connecticut Clockmaker ca. 1800 Smithsonian American Art Museum Washington, D.C. | Ralph Earl was born into a prominent family of craftsmen, and his portraits are painted with sharp attention to detail. In this painting the subject sits in a Sheraton “fancy” armchair, a type that was especially popular in the Connecticut Valley, where Earl worked. The wooden clock on the tea table might be a kind of clock that was developed in... | Unrated | Anonymous |
- Ralph Earl