The Baptistery of Parma

Reference: S625
Author Georg Belton MOORE
Year: 1843
Zone: Parma
Printed: London
Measures: 275 x 390 mm
Not Available

Reference: S625
Author Georg Belton MOORE
Year: 1843
Zone: Parma
Printed: London
Measures: 275 x 390 mm
Not Available

Description

View taken from The Ecclesiastical Architecture of Italy: From the Time of Constantine to the Fifteenth Century…, published by Henry Bohn, London 1843, printed by Day & Haghe.

The work is illustrated with 81 plates of exteriors and interiors of ecclesiastical architecture in Italian cities; the drawings were made by G. Moore, D. Quaglio, J. Aliusetti, J. M. Knapp, Hallman, and E. Lear, and the lithographs by Owen Jones, G. Moore, T. T. Bury, and R. K. Thomas.

George Belton Moore, was born on 24 March and baptised at St Marylebone, London on 26 May 1806, son of William Moore and his wife Mary. A landscape, architectural and topographical draughtsman who was a pupil of Augustus Charles Pugin (1762-1832). George taught drawing at the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich and at University College, London. He exhibited landscapes, often of Italian subjects, at the Royal Academy and other exhibitions from 1830 until his death. 

 

Tinted lithograph, in very good condition.

Georg Belton MOORE (Londra 1805 -1875)

George Belton Moore, was born on 24 March and baptised at St Marylebone, London on 26 May 1806, son of William Moore and his wife Mary. A landscape, architectural and topographical draughtsman who was a pupil of Augustus Charles Pugin (1762-1832). George taught drawing at the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich and at University College, London. He exhibited landscapes, often of Italian subjects, at the Royal Academy and other exhibitions from 1830 until his death. He exhibited from Park Cottage, Saint Pancras, London at the Suffolk Fine Arts Association at Ipswich in 1850 'The Gondola-That in a Gondola were seen together, Lorenzo and his amorous Jessice'. In 1851 he published 'Perspective, its Principles and Practice,' and 'The Principles of Colour applied to Decorative Art.' He married at Brighton, Sussex in 1848, Ann Stephenson (1819-23 November 1878). George Belton Moore, late of the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich and the University College, London, died at 221 Burrage Road, Plumstead, Kent on 4 November 1875, in his seventieth year, leaving his estate of some £3,000 to his widow Ann and children Mary Ann Lind, spinster, and George William, banker's clerk.

Georg Belton MOORE (Londra 1805 -1875)

George Belton Moore, was born on 24 March and baptised at St Marylebone, London on 26 May 1806, son of William Moore and his wife Mary. A landscape, architectural and topographical draughtsman who was a pupil of Augustus Charles Pugin (1762-1832). George taught drawing at the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich and at University College, London. He exhibited landscapes, often of Italian subjects, at the Royal Academy and other exhibitions from 1830 until his death. He exhibited from Park Cottage, Saint Pancras, London at the Suffolk Fine Arts Association at Ipswich in 1850 'The Gondola-That in a Gondola were seen together, Lorenzo and his amorous Jessice'. In 1851 he published 'Perspective, its Principles and Practice,' and 'The Principles of Colour applied to Decorative Art.' He married at Brighton, Sussex in 1848, Ann Stephenson (1819-23 November 1878). George Belton Moore, late of the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich and the University College, London, died at 221 Burrage Road, Plumstead, Kent on 4 November 1875, in his seventieth year, leaving his estate of some £3,000 to his widow Ann and children Mary Ann Lind, spinster, and George William, banker's clerk.