Podcast White House Builder James Hoban’s Irish Roots
Over 200 years ago, James Hoban left Ireland for America to pursue his dream of becoming an architect. Selected by President...
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American Portraitist
How Long? 8 minutes
Gilbert Stuart is one of the most famous portraitists in American history, best known for his unfinished Athenaeum depiction of President George Washington. Gilbert Stuart was born in Saunderstown, Rhode Island on December 3, 1755, the youngest of three children. His family moved to Newport, Rhode Island a few years later, and Stuart began painting as a teenager. He initially studied under a local portraitist, Samuel King. His first known painting, completed in 1769, was titled Dr. Hunter’s Dogs.1
In 1770, Stuart became an apprentice to Scottish portraitist Cosmo Alexander. After touring the southern colonies, they traveled together to Scotland in 1771, but Alexander died soon thereafter. Stuart returned to Newport and began painting portraits, including Mrs. John Bannister and her Son in 1774 and Benjamin Waterhouse in 1775. At the beginning of the American Revolution, as his Loyalist family fled to Canada, Stuart departed for London to establish himself as an artist. He struggled for several years to support himself as an organist and eventually received found assistance from Benjamin West, a former American colonial residing in London. While West preferred painting scenes from history, Stuart focused on portraiture. He became known for his uncanny ability to capture the personality of the individual in his painting.3
Gilbert Stuart, 1778, self-portrait
Redwood Library and Athenaeum in Newport, Rhode IslandStuart spent five years as an apprentice and assistant to West, improving his work with color and by developing a more sophisticated brushstroke.4
After opening his own studio and enjoying success as an artist, Stuart married a British woman, Charlotte Coates. Unfortunately, Stuart mismanaged his growing finances. In debt to numerous creditors, he moved his family to Dublin, where he engaged in portraiture of the Protestant minority ruling class for several years.7
The Skater, 1782, Gilbert Stuart
Andrew W. Mellon Collection, National Gallery of ArtAfter the Americans defeated the British in the Revolutionary War, Stuart decided he would return to the newly formed United States and find a way to paint its most famous hero, George Washington. He believed that if he could paint Washington, he would “make a fortune.” Besides the prestige of Washington as his subject, Stuart viewed the opportunity as a way to pay back his British and Irish creditors.9
Stuart landed in New York and engaged with several high-profile patrons to reestablish his reputation. In 1794, he painted a portrait of Supreme Court Chief Justice John Jay, who in turn introduced him to other connected clients. His 1794 portrait Catherine Brass Yates, the wife of a prosperous merchant, also received great acclaim. With less competition from other artists than in Europe, Stuart quickly distinguished himself in the United States as a renowned portraitist.
In 1795, Stuart attempted to secure a sitting with President George Washington. With a letter of introduction from John Jay, Stuart was successful in his endeavor. To capture the character of his subject, Stuart often engaged the man or woman in conversation. However, Washington proved reticent and it was difficult for Stuart to elicit much emotion from him. According to Washington’s grandson, Stuart began talking about horses, which animated the president.10 https://www.nga.gov/features/slideshows/gilbert-stuart.html#slide_8.
George Washington Lansdowne Portrait, 1796, Gilbert Stuart
White House Collection/White House Historical AssociationThe result was a portrait of Washington facing right, which is only available from replicas. Martha Washington liked the painting so much, she asked Stuart to paint both herself and her husband again for portraits that would be displayed at Mount Vernon. This commission led to the most popular artistic depiction of George Washington, known as the Athenaeum portrait. Stuart never finished the original, but he used it to make many replicas of the painting, including an 1805 version in the White House Collection. The original, unfinished painting was sold by Stuart’s daughter to the Boston Athenaeum in 1831. In 1980, the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery and the Boston Museum of Fine Arts jointly purchased the painting.11
In 1796, while still in Philadelphia, George Washington sat a second time for the artist. This time, Stuart produced a full-length painting, measuring eight by five feet in size. Washington is dressed in civilian clothes, emphasizing his role as president rather than a military general. It is reminiscent of European portraiture, given the symbolic inclusion of objects and the posture of his outstretched right arm. In the portrait, Washington strikes an oratorical pose, likely modeled after his December 8, 1795 Annual Address in which he advocated for the Jay Treaty.12
There is some controversy about whether the Lansdowne copy in the White House was actually painted by Gilbert Stuart. The painter allegedly denied in 1802 that he had painted the portrait on display at the White House. However, it is likely that Stuart was forced to deny that he had painted it since he actually sold it twice: once to the United States government in 1797 and then again to a New York museum proprietor, Gardiner Baker. Eventually, Baker’s copy ended up with a creditor, who again sold it to the United States government. Given the fact that Stuart profited twice from this copy, he “disowned the painting to cover his duplicity.”15
Dolley Madison, 1804, Gilbert Stuart
White House Collection/White House Historical AssociationDuring the War of 1812, on August 24, 1814, the British marched into the capital city. According to popular folklore, First Lady Dolley Madison personally saved the portrait of Washington, cutting it out of its frame and carrying it off as wagons and carts departed the White House. However, it is more likely that Mrs. Madison instructed others to remove the portrait, including the president’s steward Jean-Pierre Sioussat and gardener Thomas McGrath.16
Gilbert Stuart moved his studio to Washington, D.C. in 1802. He was immensely popular in the nation’s young capital city and was flooded with requests for portraits from the social and political elite. He painted Dolley Madison in 1804 when her husband James served as Secretary of State; the likeness is regarded as exhibiting “astonishing subtleties…and masterful transitions of tone.”18
After contracting malaria, Stuart relocated once again, this time to Boston. He spent his remaining twenty-three years there, painting the city’s most prominent residents, attending social functions, and mentoring young American artists.20
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