Julius Caesar Ibbetson. Julius Caesar Ibbetson was a British 18th-century landscape and watercolour painter.
Ibbetson was born at Farnley Moor, Leeds. He was the second child of Richard Ibbetson, a clothier from Yorkshire.
According to his Memoir, his mother fell on the ice and went into premature labour, causing him to be delivered by caesarean section and resulting in a middle name he attempted to hide throughout his life. Ibbetson was probably educated at a local Moravian community and then by Quakers in Leeds.
According to James Mitchell in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, the unusual thoroughness of his education is reflected in the fluent prose, both of his published painting manuals and of his regular, often entertaining, and rewarding correspondence with patrons. Ibbetson was apprenticed to John Fletcher, a ship painter in Hull, from 1772 to 1777.
He then moved to London, where for the next ten years he was primarily a picture restorer for a Clarke of Leicester Fields. In 1782 wrote an account of his life and sent it to the artist Benjamin West which was transcribed by Joseph Farington in 1805. Around 1780, Ibbetson married his first wife, Elizabeth. In 1785, Ibbetson began exhibiting at the Royal Academy with View of North Fleet. Mitchell calls George Biggin, which is one of his earliest known works, an accomplished full-length portrait in the Gainsborough tradition, should be con