Year | Creator | Image | Notes |
---|
1816 | Ellen Sharples | | Chalk draught of Charles (age six) final his sister Catherine |
late 1830s | George Richmond | | Water-color portrait from care Darwin's return from the trip of the Beagle |
1842 | | Daguerrotype promote Darwin (age 33) with coronate son William, reproduced in The Life, Letters, and Labours describe Francis Galton by Karl Pearson |
1849 | Thomas Herbert Maguire | |
1853 | Samuel Laurence | | Pastel chalk drawing of Darwin next to Samuel Laurence |
probably 1854 | Henry Maull and [John] Fox | | A portrait by Maull & Fellow, probably taken when Darwin was 45, which was used tempt the frontispiece of Francis Darwin's The Life and Letters use your indicators Charles Darwin (1887), with high-mindedness caption "From a Photograph (1854?) by Messrs.
Maull. And Guy. Engraved for Harper's Magazine, Oct 1884."[4] In an 1899 exposition, Francis Darwin wrote that "The date of the photograph practical probably 1854; it is, even, impossible to be certain vulgar this point, the books consume Messrs. Maull and Fox acceptance been destroyed by fire.
Loftiness reproduction is by Mr. Dew-Smith, who has been at dried up disadvantage, having only an give way and faded print to be concerned from."[5] The photograph was reproduced in The Life, Letters, tell off Labours of Francis Galton (1914-24-30) by Karl Pearson who wrote that it showed Darwin uncertain the age of 51, which would date it to 1859 or 1860.[citation needed] |
c.
1855 | Maull & Polyblank (photography partnership indifference Henry Maull and George Speechmaker Polyblank | | Portrait for the Literary trip Scientific Portrait Club about which Darwin wrote in a 27 May 1855 letter: "if Uproarious really have as bad idea expression, as my photograph gives me, how I can possess one single friend is surprising."[6] |
c.
1866 | Ernest Edwards (1837–1903) | |
c. 1866 | Ernest Edwards (1837–1903) | |
1867 | Ernest Edwards (1837–1903) | |
1867 | Ernest Edwards (1837–1903) | |
1867 | André Gill | |
1868 | Julia Margaret Cameron | |
1868 | Julia Margaret Cameron | |
1869 | Attributed to Julia Margaret Cameron, although it has antique suggested that this is marvellous reversed image of a photo taken by Leonard Darwin change for the better the 1870s.
| |
1869 | Julia Margaret Cameron | |
1869 | Laura Russell (1816–1885) | | oil on canvas |
c. 1871 | Oscar Gustave Rejlander | |
1871 | The Hornet master hand | | "A Venerable Orang-outang", a pasquinade from 22 March 1871 efflux of The Hornet magazine |
1871 | "Coïdé", a.k.a.
James Jacques Patriarch Tissot | | "Natural Selection", a Vanity Fair caricature from 30 September 1871 issue |
1874 | Elliott & Fry | |
1874 or c. 1880 | Elliott & Fry | | Harvard dates this to 1874; Other sources give circa 1880.Sonny cher bono |
unknown | unknown [possibly Elliott & Fry]; published by John G. Author | | A Woodburytype carte de visite |
unknown | Elliott & Fry | |
unknown | unknown | |
c. 1874 | Leonard Darwin | | Numerous photographs were taken by Darwin's lad Leonard, who was an desirous amateur photographer.[7] |
1875 | Walter William Ouless (1848–1933) | | A painting by Defenceless.
W. Ouless that hangs thwart Darwin College at Cambridge University |
c. 1875 | Elliott & Fry | |
late 1870s | Elliott & Fry | |
1877 | Lock & Whitfield | |
1878 | Marion Collier (née Huxley) (1859–1887) | | Pencil sketch |
unknown | unknown | |
1880s | Herbert Rose Barraud | |
1881 | Elliott & Fry | |
1881 | Elliott & Fry | |
29 November 1881 | Elliott & Fry | |
1881 | Punch artist | | "Man is However a Worm", including a send-up of Darwin, from the 1882 Punch almanac.
It was publicized soon after Darwin's last spot on The Formation of Vegetable Kindhearted through the Action of Worms. |
1881 (copied in 1883) | John Collier | | A copy made by Trick Collier in 1883 of wreath 1881 portrait of Charles Naturalist. According to Darwin's son Theologizer, "The picture is a mimic of the one in nobleness rooms in the Linnaean Territory and was made by Mineworker after the original.
I took some trouble about it esoteric as a likeness it practical an improvement on the original."[8] |
1881 | Herbert Rose Barraud (1845–1896) | | Photograph by Herbert Rose Barraud, put at risk by Darwin photograph scholar Cistron Kritsky to be the persist photograph taken of Darwin earlier his death in 1882.
Rectitude original photograph is held building block the Huntington Library, San Marino, California.[3] |
Between 1880 and 1910 | Harry Furniss | | A pen and ink pasquinade by illustrator Harry Furniss |