36 results filtered with: John Martin

- Pictures
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God creates light over the waters. Wood engraving by Thompson after J. Martin.
John MartinReference: 15472i
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A woman is swept away by the tempestuous deluge; a small company of people on a hill try to save themselves; a serpent slithers beside them. Mezzotint after J. Martin.
John MartinReference: 15712i
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The Crucifixion. Mezzotint by John Martin after himself, 1834.
John MartinDate: 1st July 1834Reference: 34474i
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Christ feeds the five thousand in a sublime landscape. Mezzotint with engraving by J. Martin, 1835.
John MartinDate: 1835Reference: 23920i
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The Apocalypse. Mezzotint by J. Stephenson after J. Martin.
John MartinReference: 34616i- Pictures
Eve sees herself for the first time as a reflection in a pool. Mezzotint by J. Martin, 1827.
John MartinDate: [1827]Reference: 2846183i
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Animal magnetism examined: in a letter to a country gentleman / [John Martin].
John MartinDate: 1790
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An account of the natives of the Tonga islands, in the south Pacific ocean. With an original grammar and vocabulary of their language / Compiled and arranged from the extensive communications of Mr. William Mariner, several years resident in those islands. By John Martin.
William MarinerDate: [etc., etc.] 1827- Pictures
A man prays in a vast grotto. Etching by W.R. Smith after J. Martin.
John MartinDate: 1800-1899Reference: 2818713i
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The killing of the Egyptian firstborn by God. Coloured mezzotint by J. Martin, 1836, after himself.
John MartinDate: 1836Reference: 20810i
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An account of the natives of the Tonga Islands, in the South Pacific Ocean. With an original grammar and vocabulary of their language / Compiled and arranged from the extensive communications of Mr. William Mariner, several years resident in those Islands. By John Martin, M.D. "The savages of America inspire less interest...since celebrated navigators have made known to us the inhabitants of the islands of the South Sea.....The state of half-civilization in which those islanders are found gives a peculiar charm to the description of their manners....Such pictures, no doubt, have more attraction than those which pourtray the solemn gravity of the inhabitant of the banks of the Missouri or the Maranon." Preface to Humboldt's Personal Narrative. In two volumes.
William MarinerDate: 1817