THE ROYAL DUBLIN SOCIETY 131 



Figure and Landscape Painters 



Thos. James Mulvany (4). Wm. B. Sarsfield Taylor. 



John George Mulvany. John Moreau. 



Marine Painter 

 Joseph F. Ellis. 



Miniature Painters 



John Comerford. Edward Jones. 



Thomas Robinson. Buck (? Frederick). 



Wm. J. Cooke. Andrew Dunn. 



Sculptors 



John Hickey. Constantine Panormo. 



Edward Smyth. John Gallagher. 



John Smyth. Thomas Kirk. 

 William Behnes. 



Many names eminent in Irish art are not included 

 in this list, and it is doubtful if some of those 

 mentioned were educated in the schools. Several of 

 them have already been noticed in these pages, and, in 

 addition, the following are worthy of some mention. 



1. Henry Tresham, one of our most eminent Irish 

 painters, who was born in Dublin in 1749, received his art 

 education in the Dublin schools under Ennis and Robert 

 West. He accompanied his patron, Lord Cawdor, to Rome, 

 and remained on the continent for fourteen years. His 

 work was modelled on the Roman school, and he chiefly 

 painted subjects from scriptural, English, and Roman 

 history. Tresham died in 1814. 



2. Hugh Douglas Hamilton was born in Dublin in 

 1739, an d studied in the schools under Robert West and 

 James Mannin. He excelled in crayon drawing. His 

 portrait of the Right Hon. John Foster, last Speaker of 

 the Irish House of Commons, is in possession of the 

 Corporation of Dublin, and that of " Dean Kirwan preach- 

 ing " is now in England. Hamilton died in Dublin in 



