Thomas Watling
Thomas Watling born September 19, 1762 in Dumfries, Scotland, who died around 1814, was an early Australian painter and illustrator. Originally from Scotland, he was transported on the East Indiaman Royal Admiral as a convict to Sydney, in the newly established Colony of New South Wales, in 1792 for forging banknotes. In Sydney he worked with John White, the colony's Surgeon General, copying natural history illustrations. In 1796 he was given a conditional pardon by the colony's second governor, John Hunter.[1] Thomas Watling painted many of the early colonial pictures of Australia. One of his paintings, "Sydney 1794", is a large work painted in oils and appears to have been painted from a series of sketches that he took with him back to England. It now belongs to the Dixson Gallery in New South Wales.
See also
References
Further reading
- Hindwood, K.A. (1970). "The "Watling" drawings with incidental notes on the "Lambert" and the "Latham" drawings". Proceedings of the Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales. 89 (1968-1969): 16–32.
- Watling, Thomas (1794). Letters From An Exile At Botany Bay, To His Aunt In Dumfries: giving a particular account of the settlement of New South Wales, with the customs and manners of the inhabitants (PDF). Penrith, Scotland: Ann Bell. OCLC 225347415.
External links
- Watling,Thomas (1762–?) Australian Dictionary of Biography
- "The Watling Collection". London: Natural History Museum.