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Thomas
Duncan (1807-1845)
Scottish
portrait and historical painter, was born at Kinclaven, in Perthshire.
He was educated at the Perth Academy, and began the study of
the law, but abandoned it for art. Beginning under the instruction
of Sir William Allan, he early attained distinction as a delineator
of the human figure; and his first pictures established his
fame so completely, that at a very early age he was appointed
professor of coloring, and afterwards of drawing, in the Trustees
Academy of Edinburgh. In 1840 he painted one of his finest pictures,
Prince Charles Edward and the Highlanders entering Edinburgh
after the Battle of Prestonpans, which secured his election
as an associate of the Royal Academy in 1843. In the same year
he produced his picture of Charles Edward asleep after Culloden,
protected by Flora MacDonald, which, like many other of his
works, has been often engraved. In 1844 appeared his Cupid and
his Martyrdom of John Brown of Priesthill. His last work was
a portrait of himself, now in the National Gallery in Edinburgh.
He particularly excelled in his portraits of ladies and children.
He died in Edinburgh on the 25th of May 1845.
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