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Edward Pritchett

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Edward Pritchett
Born
Edward Prickett

1807 (1807)
DiedJanuary 12, 1876(1876-01-12) (aged 68–69)
19 Westmoreland Place, Camberwell
Resting placeNunhead Cemetery

Edward Pritchett (1807-1876) was a nineteenth-century English painter and man of mystery.[1]

Little is known of Pritchett's life; he has appropriately been described as "elusive."[2] Pritchett spent periods over three decades living and working in Venice, producing admirable views of the city; he was one of a group of English artists who produced notable records of the scenes of northern Italy, a group that included John Wharlton Bunney, James Holland, the brothers-in-law Luke Fildes and Henry Woods, and, in a later generation, William Logsdail.

References

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  1. ^ Christopher Wood, Victorian Painting, Boston, Little, Brown & Co., 1999; pp. 362-3.
  2. ^ Art Index, New York, H. W. Wilson Co., 1974; Vol. 21, p. 758.
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