John Cochran (artist)
John Cochran or Cochrane (active 1821-1865) was a Scottish portrait miniaturist, a stipple and line engraver and a painter of watercolours. Cochran exhibited his portraits at the Royal Academy between 1821 and 1823, and at the Suffolk Street Gallery from 1821 to 1827.[1]
Cochran contributed steelplate engravings to The National Portrait Gallery (four volumes, 1820), Wilson and Chamber's Land of Burns (1840) and Wright's Gallery of Engravings (1844–1846).[1][2]
Cochrane painted portraits of many famous people such as Queen Victoria at the age of 18, King William IV, the Duke of Gloucester and Edinburgh, the Duke of York and Albany, , the Viscount Nelson and the Earl of St Vincent. At the National Portrait Gallery they list 61 portraits by Cochran.
Cochran also painted watercolours of Scottish landscapes and coastal scenes. It is unknown yet if he was related to the Scottish painter William Cochran (artist) (1738–1785).
Notes[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b Scharlau Prints and Maps Dictionary of Artists
- ^ National Portrait Gallery, Works by John Cochran
References[]
- "Scharlau Prints and Maps". Archived from the original on 9 October 2011. Retrieved 26 November 2009.
- "Works by John Cochran". National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 26 November 2009.
External links[]
Media related to John Cochran at Wikimedia Commons
- An engraving of The Marvel of Peru. by Kenny Meadows for Flowers of Loveliness, 1838, with a poetical illustration by Letitia Elizabeth Landon.
- Works by John Cochran in the National Portrait Gallery, London
- 19th-century British artists
- 19th-century Scottish painters
- Scottish male painters
- 19th-century engravers
- Scottish engravers
- Portrait miniaturists
- Scottish watercolourists
- Scottish landscape painters
- Scottish painter stubs