Hired to Depress: A Digital Scholarly Edition of William Blake's Annotations to Sir Joshua Reynolds' DiscoursesMain MenuWho is William Blake?Just who is William Blake? And why does his scribbling in a book matter?Who is Sir Joshua Reynolds?Important FiguresTitle PageContents of The First VolumeDedication and To the KingSome Account of the Life and Writings of Sir Joshua ReynoldsWritten by Edmond Malone, Esq.The First DiscourseBibliographyElizabeth Pottera6e9fb7ea6eda3e5063e2aee73ca5f372e99b8f3
Banditti Going out in the Morning
12017-04-15T22:05:19-07:00Elizabeth Pottera6e9fb7ea6eda3e5063e2aee73ca5f372e99b8f370541by John Hamilton Mortimer, 1773.plain2017-04-15T22:05:19-07:00Elizabeth Pottera6e9fb7ea6eda3e5063e2aee73ca5f372e99b8f3
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12017-02-26T12:10:31-08:00John Hamilton Mortimer31740-1779image_header2017-04-15T22:06:03-07:00John Hamilton Mortimer (1740–1779) was a painter, etcher, and draftsman and president of the Society of Artists of Great Britain in 1774.
Although a student of Reynolds, Mortimer painted in a picturesque, flamboyant, and romantic style. Banditti was the preferential subject for Salvator Rosa, inspiring works like Banditti Going out in the Morning (1773). Mortimer was also fascinated with subjects and themes from Anglo-Saxon history rather than Classical Greece and Rome.