Professional photographer, his photographic studio was listed in directories from 1858 to 1868 at Richmond, Victoria, before moving to East Melbourne. Focused on portraiture, and ...
Lyttleton painted mostly racehorse portraits. He was a foundation member of the Victorian Academy of Arts and exhibited ten oils at the first and second ...
Colonial publican who drew his cricket club while waiting for his pub to be licensed. His drawing style has been criticised as too English, although ...
Colonial male police photographer and watchmaker who took the infamous photographs of the Kelly gang captured, including images of the charred remains of several of ...
portrait painter and settler, Thomas S. Officer exhibited three oil portraits in the 1854 Melbourne Exhibition and is remembered primarily as the father of the ...
Thomas Price was a painter, photographic colourist and art teacher. Known for his cheery disposition he had a successful career as a miniaturist in London ...
John Richardson, painter and engraver, arrived at Port Phillip in the Clifton on 13 February 1850. His father was Moses Richardson, a well-known Newcastle antiquary, ...
Thomas Richardson exhibited 'Specimens of Engraving' at the 1861 Victorian Exhibition. He may have been John Thomas Richardson who sent engraving work from a business ...
Thomas Roberts was a painter, art teacher and administrator. He made a portrait of Rev. Thomas Smith which Sydney Morning Herald described as, "painted in ...
Amateur photographer Thomas Ross had his photographic equipment and other possessions stolen by Frank Williams in 1864. The equipment was presumably returned to him, however, ...
painter and sculptor, the only woman in any of the Australian colonies known to have modelled large-scale sculptures. She was successful enough to retire on ...