John Daniel Bond (1725 – 18 December 1803) was an English painter.
[1] Bond was baptised in Stroud, Gloucestershire in July 1725 and probably educated at The Crypt School in Gloucester, where his uncle was an usher.
[2] He was apprenticed as a painter of japanned and papier-mâché goods to Henry Clay in Birmingham,[3] and from 1757 was in charge of the ornamental department of Matthew Boulton's Soho Manufactory.
[3] His productions are described as highly finished landscapes, broad in treatment, after the style of Wilson, R.A..
In 1804, a few months after his death, a number of his pictures and drawings were sold by auction in London.