William Mulready
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Image:Irish Stamp WIlliam Mulready.jpg
William Mulready (April 1 1786 - July 7, 1863) was an Irish genre painter living in London. He is best known for his romanticizing depictions of rural scenes.
William Mulready was born in Ennis, County Clare. Early in his life, in 1792, the family moved to London, where he was able to get an education and was taught painting well enough so that he was accepted at the Royal Academy School at the age of fourteen.
Many of his early pictures show landscapes, before he started to build a reputation as a genre painter from 1808 on, painting mostly everyday scenes from rural life. Besides this, he also illustrated books. His paintings were very popular in Victorian times.
In 1815 he was elected a member of the Royal Academy. In the same year, he also was awarded the French "Légion d'honneur".
He died at the age of 77 in Bayswater, London and is buried in the nearby Kensal Green Cemetery where a monument to his memory was erected.
Image:William Mulready 001.jpg
See also
External links
Artistic
- County Clare Library Famous Artist Born in Ennis
- National Portrait Gallery, London Portraits of, and by, William Mulready
- Tate Collection, UK Works by William Mulready
Philatelic
- Mulready Stationery Envelopes, Letter Sheets, Parodies and Exhibit Pages
- National Postal Museum, Washington, D.C. Stamps That Changed the World
Other
- Kensal Green Cemetery Tour Find the Mulready Tomb