
GEORGE ROMNEY
Born in 1734 among the fells of Cumberland, George grew up on his father’s modest farm, where the older man’s skill with mahogany furniture sparked the boy’s curiosity. He preferred sketchbooks to school lessons, even building a fiddle that stayed with him for life. After a brief stint at school, his father moved him to the workshop, but George spent his spare time copying magazine illustrations. An itinerant painter, Steele, recognized his promise and took him on as an apprentice, teaching him the basics of mixing pigments and preparing palettes.
A night of scandal and fever followed when Steele helped a young couple elope, leaving George ill and under the care of a servant, Mary Abbott, whom he soon married. Returning home, he opened a small studio, painting signboards, local portraits, and occasional landscapes sold through a town‑hall lottery. The modest earnings allowed him and his wife to save enough to pursue a larger stage, and in March 1762 he set off for London with only a few pounds and great hope.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (67K characters)
Series
Bell's miniature series of painters
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United Kingdom: George Bell & Sons, 1901,reprint 1908.
Credits
Al Haines
Release date
2022-10-25
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1858–1942
Known for writing vividly about European art and artists, this British scholar brought portrait miniatures, collectors’ treasures, and art history to a wide readership. He also wrote under the pen name Rowley Cleeve.
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