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Reinagle Water Spaniel
Reinagle is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: *Alexander Reinagle (1756–1809), English-born American composer and organist * Caroline Reinagle (born Orger) (1818–1892), English composer, pianist, and writer * George Philip Reinagle (1802–1835), English marine painter, son of Ramsay Richard Reinagle * Hugh Reinagle (c. 1790–1834), American painter * Joseph Reinagle (1762–1836), English music composer and cellist *Philip Reinagle (1749–1833), English animal, landscape and botanical painter *Ramsay Richard Reinagle Ramsay Richard Reinagle (19 March 1775 – 17 November 1862) was an English portrait, landscape, and animal painter, and son of Philip Reinagle. Biography Ramsay Richard Reinagle was a pupil of his father Philip Reinagle, whose style he foll ...
(1775–1862), English portrait, landscape and animal painter, and son of Philip Reinagle {{surname, Reinagle ...
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Alexander Reinagle
Alexander Robert Reinagle (23 April 1756 – 21 September 1809) was an English-born American composer, organist, and theater musician. He should not be confused with his nephew of the same name, Alexander Robert Reinagle (21 August 1799 – 6 April 1877), also a composer and organist, who lived all his life in Britain. He was a close friends with a young Mozart when he visited London. He was influenced by Haydn, Mozart and Clementi. Scotland Reinagle was born in Portsmouth, England. His father was a Hungarian professional musician and his mother was Scots. His brother was Joseph Reinagle. He studied music with his father, then with Raynor Taylor in Edinburgh. He went on a trip to London in 1763. He met Mozart and his family a year later. At first, Reinagle made a living in the shipping industry, making several trips to the American colonies during the 1770s. In Edinburgh, he taught music and presented several concerts. His first keyboard compositions were published in Glasgo ...
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Caroline Reinagle
Caroline Reinagle (born Caroline Orger) (1 May 1817 – 11 March 1892) was an English classical composer, pianist, and writer. Only a few of her works have survived. Life Reinagle was born in London on 1 May 1817. Her father was Dr Thomas Orger and her mother was Mary Ann Orger who was a comic actress.Patrick Waddington, ‘Reinagle , Caroline (1817–1892)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 200accessed 14 March 2015/ref> In the 1840s she had several of her works published and performed, including a piano trio, premiered by 1842, 1842 Volume, with 14 search "hits" for Orger, including several for a publication of her piano concerto op. 2 - including a review in the May 19, 1842 issue on p. 155; and one for a performance of her trio. and a piano concerto, published 1842 and performed by her in 1843 at Hanover Square Rooms. Her mother was well read and her father, Dr Thomas Orger was a translator of Ovid and Anacreon, an ...
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George Philip Reinagle
George Philip Reinagle (1802 – 6 December 1835) was an English marine painter, Life George Philip Reinagle was born in 1802 and was the third son of painter Ramsay Richard Reinagle. He began painting under the tutelage of his father, though would mostly develop his skills by studying the works of Ludolf Backhuysen and Willem van de Velde. Reinagle would paint with oil as well as watercolours. In 1822, he presented his work for the first time at the Royal Academy, showing a portrait of a gentleman. He would then exhibit ''Ship in a Storm firing a Signal of Distress'' and a ''Calm'' in 1824, and ''A Dutch Fleet of the Seventeenth Century coming to Anchor in a Breeze'' the following year. In 1827, he witnessed the battle of Navarino and would subsequently paint a number of paintings depicting the battle such as ''Illustrations of the Battle of Navarin'' and ''Illustrations of the Occurrences at the Entrance of the Bay of Patras between the English Squadron and Turkish Fleets 18 ...
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Hugh Reinagle
Hugh Reinagle ( in Philadelphia – May 1834 near New Orleans) was an American painter. He studied under John J. Holland, and became known as a landscape painter, working in oil and watercolor. For many years, he worked as a scene painter in New York, and produced also a panorama of New York, which was exhibited in that city. In 1830, he went to New Orleans, where he died of cholera four years later. He was one of the original thirty members of the National Academy of Design, and exhibited there, in 1831, a ''View of the Falls of Mount Ida''. His ''Macdonough's Victory on Lake Champlain'' was engraved by Benjamin Tanner Benjamin ( he, ''Bīnyāmīn''; "Son of (the) right") blue letter bible: https://www.blueletterbible.org/lexicon/h3225/kjv/wlc/0-1/ H3225 - yāmîn - Strong's Hebrew Lexicon (kjv) was the last of the two sons of Jacob and Rachel (Jacob's th ... in 1816. Notes * External links * 1790 births 1834 deaths 19th-century American painters 19th-cen ...
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Joseph Reinagle
Joseph Reinagle (1762 – 12 November 1825) was a music composer and popular cellist of the 18th century. He was a contemporary of Joseph Haydn, with whom he performed as principal cello. He also wrote a guide to playing the cello. Biography Joseph Reinagle, the son of a German musician resident in England, was born in Portsmouth in 1762. He was the brother of Alexander Reinagle. He was at first intended for the navy, but became apprentice to a jeweller in Edinburgh. Then, adopting music as a profession, he studied the French horn and trumpet with his father, and soon appeared in public as a player of those instruments. Acting on medical advice, he abandoned the wind instruments, and studied the violoncello under Schetky (who married his sister), and the violin under Aragoni. He succeeded so well that he was appointed leader of the Edinburgh Theatre band. After appearing as a cellist in London, he went in 1784 to Dublin, where he remained for two years. Returning to Lon ...
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Philip Reinagle
Philip Reinagle (1749 – 27 November 1833) was an English painter of animals, landscapes, and botanical scenes. The son of a Hungarian musician living in Edinburgh, Reinagle came to London in 1763 and after serving an apprenticeship, later became a member of the Royal Academy. Biography Philip Reinagle entered the schools of the Royal Academy in 1769, and later became a pupil of Allan Ramsay, whom he assisted on his numerous portraits of George III and Queen Charlotte. He first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1773. The works he showed were almost all portraits until 1785, when the monotonous work of producing replicas of royal portraits appears to have given him a distaste for portraiture, and led him to abandon it for animal painting. He became very successful in his treatment of sporting dogs, especially spaniels, of birds, and of dead game. In 1787, however, he showed a ''View taken from Brackendale Hill, Norfolk'', at the academy and from then on exhibited works m ...
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