Lightwood was one of Melbourne's earliest practising scenic artists. In 1843 the 'Port Phillip Herald' praised his scenery for George Buckingham's production of All for ...
Painter and lithographer, was recorded in the Port Phillip Almanac and Directory for 1847 as a lithographer living in Melbourne. It is likely that he ...
Sketcher, filled two books with watercolour sketches of a variety of subjects, signing several drawings of Tasmanian shells - probably from Hobart - and dating ...
Illuminator, engrosser and clerk, Sydney, Melbourne and Hobart Town. Myers designed, executed and signed what is thought to be the earliest surviving illuminated address in ...
Sketched Tasmanian scenes that include Campbell Town, Hobart Town, rural areas and churches. He produced an album containing seventeen of his watercolour sketches.
Colonial era Sydney painter, caricaturist, illustrator, journalist and publican. Newall was also a renowned marksman who apparently bet a case of champagne that he could ...
A travelling photographer who worked in both Sydney and Hobart Town. He exhibited his daguerreotype's both nationally and internationally and is renowned for his portraits ...
A painter who dealt mainly in portraiture. He painted portraits for many of Sydney's leading residents and exhibited his works in various exhibitions. His last ...
A photographer, scientific entertainer, inventor, photographic supplier and chemist. He advertised his portrait photography and traded under Norrie's Photographic Portrait Establishment.
John Penman was lithographer and copperplate printer who was born in Scotland and then emigrated to South Australia in 1848. Later his colleague, William Galbraith, ...
Colonial Victorian sketcher and pastoralist. Despite mixed success as a pastoralist in regional Victoria, the landscape and rural life inspired John Phillips' artistic career and ...
Isaac Polack was a professional photographer working in Sydney in the second half of the 1840s. His grandfather was Solomon Joel Polack, a London miniature ...