Daniel Gardner

Self-portrait in oil (around 1780). Given by Daniel Gardner's great-great-granddaughter, Miss Frances Baker, to the [[National Portrait Gallery, London]] in 1923. Daniel Gardner (1750 – 8 July 1805) was a British painter, best known for his work as a portraitist. He established a fashionable studio in Bond Street in London, specializing in small scale portraits in pastel, crayons or gouache, often borrowing Reynolds' poses.

By some critics Gardner is regarded as a notable artist who, however, was not an accurate draughtsman if it came to figure work especially to facial construction in some of his pastels. For others, on the other hand, it is this special looseness or facile elegance which represents the uniqueness of Gardner's style, and in which they see an anticipation of impressionism. Provided by Wikipedia
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Published 1993
Other Authors: ...Gardner, Daniel, 1945- ....
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