(1693-1759),'' 1750,
National Portrait Gallery, London Phelps was a portrait painter. He studied under
Thomas Hudson and Sir
Joshua Reynolds. Phelps worked in Somerset painting portraits, restoring old master paintings, and working as an interior decorator. Correspondence by Richard Phelps is held at
Penn Libraries of the
University of Pennsylvania in the United States.
Artist Richard Phelps is known for his painting of
Bampfylde Moore Carew, which was engraved by
Faber. He may have made the pastel work of
George Frideric Handel that was exhibited in Paris in 1911. Phelps exhibited in London at The Society of Artists. Phelps was described as a "provincial Highmore" by Sir
Ellis Waterhouse. The
British Museum has an album of the bulk of his surviving work, which includes 312 drawings. The works include portraits of gentry, self-portraits, landscapes, genre paintings, religious studies, and grotesque figures. His drawings include George, Thomas, Mrs. Mary Carew, and Elizabeth Carew Bernard. He drew sketches of John, Thomas Popham, and Miss Popham. Some of the other people that he depicted include the Dyke Acland family members;
Charles Jennens; Margaret Luttrell (wife of
Alexander Luttrell); Rev. Henry Lockett;
Henry Percy, 9th Earl of Northumberland;
Prince Charles Edward Louis Philip Casimir, and
Sir Charles Tynte, 5th Baronet. Some of the drawings are made after the works of other artists, like
Rembrandt, Thomas Hudson, Joseph van Haecken. The album also included works by
Alessio de Marchis and an 18th-century Bolognese artist. It previously held two works by
John Vanderbank.
Dovery Manor Museum exhibited paintings by Richard Phelps in 2011.
Designer (1726-1766)'',
Dunster Castle,
National Trust Phelps was hired by
Henry Fownes Luttrell to design Conygar Tower, landscaping, and bridges for
Dunster Castle. Conygar Tower is a three-storey
folly built in 1775 on the top of a wooded hill overlooking the village of
Dunster. It has two-stage buttresses between four pointed-arched openings on every level. He designed the 18th century Castle Mill Bridge over
River Avill, which connected Dunster Castle grounds with Deer Park. The stone bridge, with two pointed arches with rock-faced voussoirs, replaced a medieval mill bridge. It was made of local stone, brick capping, and pebbles and designed with a rustic, picturesque style. There are brick parapets on the north and south side of the bridge, with a brick seat. It was listed as an
English Heritage Listed Building (264701) on 8 April 1983. ==Collections==