George Knapton. George Knapton was an English portrait painter and the first portraitist for the Society of Dilettanti in the 1740s.
He became Surveyor and Keeper of the King's Pictures from 1765-78. Knapton was born in Christchurch, Hampshire, the son of William Knapton Esquire of Brockenhurst, Hampshire.
He studied art under Jonathan Richardson, then at the St. Martin's Lane Academy. He spent some years in Italy where he became known as a sound judge of the works of the Old Masters.
An account of his visit to Herculaneum was published in the Philosophical Transactions of 1740. Knapton was an original member of the Society of Dilettanti and their first portrait artist.
He painted many members of the society-mostly in fancy dress-including the Duke of Dorset, Viscount Galway, Sir Francis Dashwood, the Earl of Holdernesse, Earl of Bessborough and Sir Bourchier Wray. Knapton resigned his position at the society in 1763. In 1750, the then Prince of Wales commissioned Knapton, together with George Vertue, to produce a catalogue of the pictures at Kensington Palace, Hampton Court and Windsor castle. In 1765, he succeeded Stephen Slaughter as Surveyor and Keeper of the King's Pictures; he was also in charge of Lord Spencer's collection at Althorp, Northamptonshire. Knapton's largest painting was that of the widowed Princess of Wales and her family. He also painted portraits of the Earl of Upper Osso