A portrait of Ralph Symons by an unknown artist, now in the
National Portrait Gallery, London, is the earliest known portrait of an artisan in England. A painting of Symons which may be this one appears in inventories at Sidney Sussex College from 1639 to 1748, and then disappears from the college record. The portrait was long known only from a post-1630 copy at Emmanuel College, a drawing in chalks by
Thomas Kerrich (1748-1828) from the original, and an 1803 printed stipple and line engraving of the Kerrich drawing by
Georg Siegmund Facius (captioned "From an original Picture which was in the/ possession of the late Mr. Essex at Cambridge"). In March 2016, the art dealers
Philip Mould & Co. announced the discovery of the "lost" painting in Turin, Italy. The portrait shows Symons in a leather jerkin holding a pair of architect's compasses. Mould offered the painting to the National Portrait Gallery, which acquired it for its Tudor galleries. The portrait, dated by the NPG to ca. 1595, went on display on 11 July 2016. ==Notes==