Artist

James Neagle

British, 1765–1822

James Neagle was a British Romanticism artist. 4 works are cataloged here, principally at National Gallery of Art. James Neagle was born in London.

Overview

James Neagle (1760?–1822) was a British engraver. Very largely a line engraver of book illustrations, he was prolific of designs by Thomas Stothard, Robert Smirke, Henry Fuseli, Gavin Hamilton, Henry Singleton, Richard Cook, and other popular artists.

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Life

Neagle went to the Royal Academy Schools in 1786. He had many commissions from the publishing firm of Cadell & Davies. In 1801, in a civil action brought by Jean Marie Delattre the engraver against John Singleton Copley, over a plate, Neagle was a witness for the plaintiff. Towards the end of his life (after 1816) he emigrated to America, where he died not long afterwards in 1822.

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Works

Neagle's work included plates for:

John Boydell's and other editions of Shakespeare, including plates after Francis Wheatley; John Sharpe's and Charles Cooke's series of English Classics; Edward Forster's Arabian Nights, 1802; Gil Blas, 1809, translated by Benjamin Heath Malkin; Ancient Terra-Cottas in the British Museum, 1810, by Taylor Combe; and James Cavanah Murphy's Arabian Antiquities of Spain, 1816. A major work was The Royal Procession in St. Paul's on St. George's Day, 1789, from a drawing by Edward Dayes.

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Family

Neagle had a son, John B. Neagle (died 1866), who practised as an engraver in Philadelphia.

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Collections represented