Miniature: Portrait of Abram Constable, brother of the artist
early 19th century
Not on view
2
George Stubbs, 1724–1806
Freeman, the Earl of Clarendon's gamekeeper, with a dying doe and hound
1800
Not on view
3
John Inigo Richards, 1730/31?–1810
A River Landscape, possibly a View from the West End of Rochester Bridge
ca. 1805
Not on view
4
Sir George Howland Beaumont seventh Baronet, 1753–1827
Landscape with Figures in the Foreground
between 1800 and 1810
Not on view
5
William Redmore Bigg, 1755–1828
The Severe Steward, or Unfortunate Tenant
between 1800 and 1801
Not on view
6
James Ward, 1769–1859
Studies of Jacky Turner and the Reverend Charles Hope's Gardener
between 1800 and 1815
Not on view
7
Thomas Stothard, 1755–1834
An Unfinished Study of Venus and Adonis
between 1800 and 1820
Not on view
8
Philip Reinagle, 1749–1833
The Blue Passion Flower, for Robert John Thornton’s Temple of Flora (London, 1799–1812)
1800
Not on view
9
Benjamin Marshall, 1768–1835
Studies of Riders in the Hunting Field
ca. 1805
Not on view
10
Sir David Wilkie, 1785–1841
The Only Child; The Jew's Harp; The Cut Finger; Blind Man's Buff; The Rent Day; The Scotch Piper; The Prieu-Dieu; and Self Portrait: A Sketch of the Eight Paintings Framed and Hanging on a Wall
undated
Not on view
11
unknown artist
Landscape with Trees, Building in left middle distance
early 19th century
Not on view
12
Daniel Turner, active 1782–1805
A View of London Bridge
early 19th century
Not on view
13
Daniel Turner, active 1782–1805
A View of Westminster Bridge
early 19th century
Not on view
14
unknown artist
Landscape with Trees on a Slope
early 19th century
Not on view
15
Henry Fuseli, 1741–1825
Tekemessa and Eurysakes
between 1800 and 1810
Not on view
16
unknown artist
Man on a White Horse
early 19th century
Not on view
17
Edmund Bristow, 1787–1876
The Rat Trap
early to mid-nineteenth century
Not on view
18
James Ward, 1769–1859
Gloucestershire Old Spot
between 1800 and 1805
Not on view
19
unknown artist
A Country House in a River Landscape, Previously Identified as Oatlands