Skip to main content
16 results filtered with: William Ward
  • John Wesley. Mezzotint by W. Ward, 1825, after G. Romney, 1789.
  • A bewildered doctor checking the pulse of lovesick young woman, her concerned mother comforts her, in the background Cupid is grinning and pointing to one of his arrows. Coloured mezzotint by W. Ward, 1802, after J. Opie.
  • Sailors at a drunken orgy. Mezzotint by W. Ward, 1807, after J.C. Ibbetson, 1802.
  • Sir James McGrigor. Mezzotint by W. Ward after J. Jackson.
  • Henry Moyes and William Nicol. Mezzotint by W. Ward, 1806, after J. R. Smith.
  • The blind beggar of Bethnal Green. Mezzotint by W. Ward, 1804, after W. Owen.
  • Henry Moyes and William Nicol. Mezzotint by W. Ward, 1806, after J. R. Smith.
  • William Holme (?). Mezzotint by W. Ward, ca. 1820, after T. Stewardson.
  • Sir John Frederick William Herschel. Mezzotint by W. Ward, 1835, after H. W. Pickersgill.
  • Joshua Brookes. Mezzotint by W. Ward, 1833, after B. E. Duppa.
  • Surrounded by lions, Daniel prays for his life. Coloured mezzotint by W. Ward, 1794, after P.P. Rubens.
  • Anthony Goodwin. Mezzotint by W. Ward, 1819, after J. Rawlinson.
  • Catharine of Aragon pleading her cause before King Henry VIII. Coloured mezzotint by W. Ward, 1802, after R. Westall.
  • The secretes of the reverend Maister Alexis of Piemont [pseud.? i. e. Girolamo Ruscelli?] Containing excellent remedies against divers diseases, woundes, and other accidentes, with the manner to make distillations, parfumes, confitures, dyinges, colours, fusions, and meltinges. A worke well approved, verye profitable and necessarie for everye man. Newely corrected and amended, and also somewhat enlarged in certaine places, whiche wanted in the fyrst edition / Translated oute of Frenche into Englyshe, by William Warde.
  • Men sitting at a table in a garden outside a tavern, smoking and drinking as a young woman joins in the conversation. Mezzotint by William Ward, 1802, after George Morland.
  • Sir John Frederick William Herschel. Mezzotint by W. Ward, 1835, after H. W. Pickersgill.