Samuel Colman (British painter)

He worked as a portrait painter and drawing-master in the city, as well as painting minutely detailed Romantic, Biblical and genre scenes.

[2] He was a religious Nonconformist who worshipped at the Castle Green Independent Chapel and the Zion Chapel in Bedminster, and his faith was central to his work;[2] some of his paintings, such as his The Destruction of the Temple (Tate Gallery), which shows the ruination of a Gothic cathedral, being criticisms of the Church of England.

[3] His apocalyptic paintings have drawn comparisons to those of John Martin.

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The Rock of Salvation by Samuel Colman, Yale Center for British Art , 1837
The Edge of Doom, 1836. Brooklyn Museum