Seated female figure with nude child on her lap, chasing a bee:
- pencil drawing on tracing paper, mounted on paper
- mounted
- 15.4 x 14.9 cm (21.7 x 16.5 cm with mount)
- [on mount] '9' (pencil note)
Seated female figure with nude child on her lap, chasing a bee:
Diana appearing in a dream to sick Arsinoe:
Chair design:
Seated man:
Two mirror views of man using compasses (probably Eratosthenes estimating Earth's circumference):
Egyptian princess (Solomon's future queen) receiving gifts from women of Tyre [and Jews]:
Murder of the sacred Apis bull by Cambyses II, with study of the king's hand:
Seated female figure with nude child on her lap, chasing a bird and a bee:
Seated female figure with nude child on her lap:
Stooped old Jewish man leaning on stick:
Crouched putto sleeping:
Seated female figure with nude male child on her lap:
Standing mother and child:
Praying angel:
Joseph riding in state:
Note on furniture:
''Most judicious and valuable is a / deal table stained black with ink it / is agreeable to the eyes at candle / light and highly condusive to the / maintenance of the
Also to be recommended a chair / made of boxes that would take the / shape [x] so conducive to longev- / ity as it is the position of complete / repose''.
Standing statue of Britannia (probably design for lighthouse):
Seated woman holding bridal veil:
Portfolio titled 'Designs. / JB' (ink)
Ink table of contents (not complete) on piece of paper partially glued to cover:
-'Designs'
-'1'
-'2'
-'3 Angel good'
-'4 Designs Mother and Child'
-'5'
-'6'
-'7'
-'8 Chair'
-'9 Mother and Child'
-'10 Exhibition Book'
-'11'
Pencil notes partially covered by piece of paper glued to cover: 'Various designs / Complete'.
Seated female figure with nude child on her lap, chasing a bee:
Winged female figure (Victoria):
Three designs featuring the goddess Britannia:
Four designs featuring the goddess Britannia:
Male figure with arms raised above head, with outline of figure (left) and sketch of head (below):
Two female figures, one on left with a set of scales and one on right with a sword (allegories of Justice):
Reclining figure of Christ(?) [no wounds depicted]:
Figure from plate 11 of the Compositions from the tragedies of Aeschylus, designed by John Flaxman, engraved by Thomas Piroli, London (1795):
Two designs featuring the goddess Britannia:
Britannia replenishing the lamp of the genius of art in grid:
Angel and three cloaked, hooded female figures: