George Washington (Q28796713)

Label from: English (en)

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genre: portrait (Q134307)
artist: Gilbert Stuart (Q41402)
collection: Brooklyn Museum (Q632682)
location: Brooklyn Museum (Q632682)
main subject: George Washington (Q23)
material used: oil paint (Q296955) canvas (Q12321255)
based on: Lansdowne Portrait (Q1760522)
depicts: George Washington (Q23)
instance of: painting (Q3305213)
Google Arts & Culture asset ID: lAExds63NNbsaw
Brooklyn Museum artwork ID: 934

catalog URL: https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/opencollection/objects/934

information from the Brooklyn Museum catalog

description: Over the course of his career, Gilbert Stuart painted approximately a hundred portraits of George Washington, including four versions (three of which are original replicas) now known as the “Lansdowne” portrait (named after the painting’s first owner). Although the grandiose scale and setting are typical of eighteenth-century European aristocratic portraiture, other allegorical elements allude to the formation of the young republic. Representing Washington in civilian clothing and with his arm outstretched in an oratorical pose, Stuart also included details such as the Great Seal of the United States; a sword and books, such as Constitution and Laws of the United States, that are symbolic of the first president’s military and political accomplishments; as well as a rainbow that refers to the era of peace following the Revolutionary War. This portrait was owned by the New York merchant William Kerin Constable, who, like Washington, benefited from the institution of slavery while also expressing abolitionist sentiments. Once on view in the family home in nearby Brooklyn Heights, the portrait passed down through Constable’s descendants before it came into the Brooklyn Museum’s collection in 1945.

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