Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)
painting by Enoch Seeman the Younger
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Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)
Summary
Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779) is a painting[1].
Key Facts
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779) is the creator of Enoch Seeman[2].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s image is recorded as Seeman Dashwood.jpg[3].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s instance of is recorded as painting[4].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s maintained by is recorded as European Paintings[5].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s genre is recorded as portrait[6].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s depicts is recorded as James Dashwood[7].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s depicts is recorded as man[8].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s depicts is recorded as Kirtlington Park[9].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s depicts is recorded as portrait[10].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s made from material is recorded as oil paint[11].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s made from material is recorded as canvas[12].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s collection is recorded as Metropolitan Museum of Art[13].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s inventory number is recorded as 56.190[14].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s location is recorded as Metropolitan Museum of Art[15].
- +1737-01-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)[16].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s main subject is recorded as James Dashwood[17].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s described by source is recorded as Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History[18].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s title is recorded as Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)[19].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s height is recorded as {'unit': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q174728', 'amount': '+243.8'}[20].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s width is recorded as {'unit': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q174728', 'amount': '+153'}[21].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s The Met object ID is recorded as 437648[22].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as Met Museum artworks on display[23].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s copyright status is recorded as public domain[24].
- Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779)'s Artstor artwork ID is recorded as 18710753[25].
Body
Works and Contributions
Sir James Dashwood (1715–1779) is the creator of Enoch Seeman[2].