Theodore Henry Adolphus Fielding (1781–1851) was an English painter, engraver, and author.
Fielding was the eldest son of Nathan Theodore Fielding. Like his brothers Copley and Thales he painted in water-colours, and in 1799 sent to the Royal Academy A View of the North Tyne, near Billingham, Northumberland. In 1814 he sent to the British Institution A Sleeping Bacchus. He continued to exhibit at both exhibitions, but it is sometimes difficult to distinguish his works from those of his younger brother, Thales Fielding. He was appointed teacher of drawing and perspective at the East India Company's Military Seminary at Addiscombe, and lived at Croydon, in the neighbourhood, until his death on 11 July 1851, at the age of seventy.
Fielding worked also in stipple and aquatint, and published numerous sets of engravings in the latter style, including a set of views as illustrations to Excursion sur les côtes et dans les ports de Normandie, after Bonington and others; Cumberland, Westmoreland, and Lancashire Illustrated (44 plates, 1822); A Series of Views in the West Indies (1827); Ten Aquatint Coloured Engravings from a work containing 48 Subjects of Landscape Scenery, principally Views in or near Bath, painted by Benjamin Barker (1824); British Castles; or, a Compendious History of the Ancient Military Structures of Great Britain (1825); A Picturesque Tour of the River Wye, from its Source to its Junction with the Severn, from Drawings by Copley Fielding.
Fielding also published some works on the practice of art:
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Fielding, Theodore Henry Adolphus". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.