Henry Pelham was an American painter, engraver, and cartographer active during the late 18th century. Pelham's many illuminating letters, especially to his half-brother John Singleton Copley, provide an important contemporary perspective of the events of the American Revolution.
A Boy with a Flying Squirrel, a 1765 portrait of Pelham by John Singleton Copley, Pelham's half-brother
Pelham's 1770 engraving The Fruits of Arbitrary Power, or The Bloody Massacre, an engraving depicting the Boston Massacre that was copied and sold by Paul Revere
John Singleton Copley was an Anglo-American painter, active in both colonial America and England. He was suspected to be born in Boston, Province of Massachusetts Bay, to Richard and Mary Singleton Copley, both Anglo-Irish. After becoming well-established as a portrait painter of the wealthy in colonial New England, he moved to London in 1774, never returning to America. In London, he met considerable success as a portraitist for the next two decades, and also painted a number of large history paintings, which were innovative in their readiness to depict modern subjects and modern dress. His later years were less successful, and he died heavily in debt. He was father of John Copley, 1st Baron Lyndhurst.
Self-Portrait, c. 1769, Winterthur Museum, Garden and Library, Delaware
Portrait of Ann Fairchild Bowler (1758)
Portrait of the Copley family (1776)
Mars, Venus and Vulcan (1754) (Kalamazoo Institute of Arts)