Richard Houston (1721?–1775) was an Irish mezzotint engraver, whose career was mostly in London.
Life
Born in Dublin about 1721, he became a pupil of John Brooks, who was also the master of James McArdell and Charles Spooner. He came to London about 1747, and some of his early plates bear the address "near Drummond's at Charing Cross".
In debt to Robert Sayer the print-seller, he was arrested and confined to the Fleet prison; according to Sayer this in order that he might know where to find the dissipated Houston. He was released in 1760, on the accession of George III. As a free agent he was commissioned by Henry Carrington Bowles.
Houston died in Hetton Street, London, on 4 August 1775, aged 54.
Works
Houston's major works are engravings after Sir Joshua Reynolds, which include portraits of:
A series of portraits by him is in Richard Rolt's Lives of the Principal Reformers, London, 1759. Besides portraits, he executed a number of subject plates, such as:
'The Elements,' four plates, and 'The Times of the Day,' two different sets of four plates, also after Mercier;
the 'Miraculous Onyx Stone;' and
plates of running horses, in which he excelled.
Houston's early work included his series of portraits of politicians after William Hoare,[1] as well as plates after Rembrandt.[2] For Bowles he engraved religious figures.[3] He painted a few miniatures.
^They comprise 'The Burgomaster Six,' 'The Syndics,' 'Haman's Condemnation,' 'An old Woman plucking a Fowl,' 'A Man holding a Knife, 'The Pen-maker,' and some others. Houston also etched two small plates of an old man and an old woman, after Rembrandt.