Public Catalogue Foundation, 2008.
Public Catalogue Foundation, 2008.
Public Catalogue Foundation, 2008.

Exhibitions:

  • Title: Paintings by Joseph Wright, A.R.A., commonly called "Wright of Derby", together with some Original Drawings, and a Complete Collection of Prints after his Works
    Dates: from 06/10/1883 to 06/10/1883
  • Title: Wright of Derby: The Bi-centenary Exhibition of Paintings by Joseph Wright
    Dates: from 03/09/1934 to 18/11/1934
  • Title: Joseph Wright of Derby, 1734 - 1797
    Venue: Derby Museum and Art Gallery
    Dates: from 04/10/1947 to 29/10/1947
  • Title: Joseph Wright of Derby, 1734 - 1797
    Dates: from 05/11/1947 to 30/11/1947
  • Title: Joseph Wright of Derby
    Venue: Norwich Castle Museum
    Dates: from 03/01/1959 to 01/02/1959
  • Title: Loan Exhibition of Works by Joseph Wright ARA of Derby
    Venue: HENRYGRAVES&CO.LTD.
    Dates: from 06/10/2025 to 06/10/2025

Related People

  • Wright, Joseph (Artist)

    Display Date: British, 1734 - 1797

    Nationality: British

    Biography: British artist.

  • Hans Winthrop Mortimer MP (Content)

    Display Date: British, 1734 - 1807

    Nationality: British

    Biography: Hans Winthrop Mortimer was born at Topping Hall in Essex on 14 May 1734 (3 May, O.S.), to Cromwell Mortimer, M.D. and Secretary of the Royal Society, and his wife Elizbeth (née Sanders). He began his training at Lincoln's Inn in 1755 and was called to the Bar in 1761. He was MP for Shaftsbury between 1775 and 1780, and again between 1781 and 1790. Mortimer sold Topping Hall before 1768, and shortly afterwards bought Cauldwell Hall near Swadlincote How he became connected with Shaftesbury is not known. In 1771 he contested the borough against Francis Sykes, standing on Lord Shaftesbury's interest; and was defeated. In 1774 he was again defeated, but returned on petition; and in 1776 was awarded £11,000 damages for bribery against his opponent, Thomas Rumbold. He now began buying property in Shaftesbury to strengthen his interest. In 1781 he was again returned on petition; and in 1784, after an expensive contest, carried both seats. In 1790 he was defeated. In 1779 the Public Ledger wrote about Mortimer: 'He votes on each side, but generally with the Opposition.' In the Parliament of 1774 seven votes by him are recorded in eleven division lists-each for the Opposition. On 12 Dec. 1781 he voted with Government on Lowther's motion against the war; did not vote in the divisions of 20 and 22 Feb. 1782; and in the remaining recorded divisions of North's Administration with the Opposition. He voted against Shelburne's peace preliminaries, 18 Feb. 1783, and for Fox's East India bill, 27 Nov. 1783; but in January 1784 was classed by Robinson as a supporter of Pitt, and henceforth voted with him. He voted for parliamentary reform on 18 Apr. 1785. He seems never to have spoken in the House. Oldfield wrote about Shaftesbury in the 1816 edition of his Representative History (iii. 405-6): A majority of the houses in this borough was purchased about the year 1774 by the late Hans Winthrop Mortimer, a gentleman who at that time possessed a fortune of £6000 per annum and £30,000 in ready money, but his contests in this borough and the petitions and lawsuits arising out of them are known to have caused his ruin; and ... [he] was confined for some years a prisoner for debt within the walls of the Fleet prison. Mortimer died 26 Feb. 1807, 'in his 73rd year'. (From The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1754-1790, ed. L. Namier, J. Brooke., 1964)

Hans Winthrop Mortimer, MP

Medium: oil on canvas

Object Type:painting
Dimensions:Frame: 811 x 674 x 70 mm (31 15/16 x 26 9/16 x 2 3/4 in.) Support: 646 x 550 mm (25 7/16 x 21 5/8 in.)
Provenance:with James Arkwright in 1883, by whom presented as a gift to Derby Museums in the same year.
Viewing Status:Contact Us
Item Ref:1883-153
Item Ref:1883-153