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George Washington

Portrait of George Washington
Artist: Adolf Ulrik Wertmuller
Oil on canvas
1794
George Washington
Portrait of George Washington
Artist: Adolf Ulrik Wertmuller
Oil on canvas
1794
Portrait of George Washington Artist: Adolf Ulrik Wertmuller Oil on canvas 1794
Status
Not on view
Label Text

This portrait of George Washington was likely made in 1795 by Swedish painter Wertmüller, a talented academician who had been appointed “First Painter” of the Swedish King. This depiction of Washington, with its exceedingly direct gaze, conveys an unusual sense of vitality not found in other portraits of the period. Of six Washington canvases the artist produced, two of them--including this work--remained unfinished, and three were in the artist’s possession at the time of his death. While the demand for contemporary Gilbert Stuart’s portraits of Washington was enormous, Wertmüller’s paintings were perhaps considered too academic and European to be fashionable. Rembrandt Peale (who also painted the president) described Wertmüller’s canvas as “dark in the coloring,” with a “German aspect."

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Datec. 1795
Artist (Swedish/American, 1751 - 1811)
Subject (American, 1732 - 1799)
Geography Probably made - United States
DimensionsOverall (Canvas): 32 5/8 in. × 27 1/4 in. × 3 in. (82.87 cm × 69.22 cm × 7.62 cm) Other (Canvas): 24 1/2 in. × 19 7/8 in. (62.23 cm × 50.48 cm)
Credit LineAcquired through the generosity of the Connoisseur Society of Mount Vernon, 2011
Object numberH-4902
DescriptionA bust-length and three-quarters turned portrait of George Washington in civilian dress, lit from the proper right. He wears a black velvet coat and a white stock with many intricately-painted horizontal gathers. Washington’s jabot is not fully shown in lace, but is underpainted in a dark taupe color. It extends from the stock to nearly 2 inches from the lower edge of the frame. The face is finely executed with many variations in flesh tone—rosy pink at the cheeks, paler around the eyes, and darkening along the jowls and in the mustache and beard area. There are slight wrinkles at the forehead, and there is a suggestion of a dimple at the chin. The lips bear a very slight smile. Washington’s blue eyes have enlarged pupils, which hover above the center of the eyes, with white areas suggesting reflection; they appear to gaze directly at the viewer. His powdered hair is bright white at the edge of the hairline, appears light gray at proper right, and becomes darker gray in the shadowing at proper left; short sideburns appear at proper right. A large black queue bag is shown at the proper right shoulder. The background is light brown around the head, and gradually becomes dark brown at the edges.

The painting is framed in a gilt wood frame.
Published ReferencesLita Solis-Cohen, “The Martin Mystique: Americana at Christie’s,” Maine Antique Digest, December 2010, 1-c.

Ellen Miles and Edmund S. Morgan, George and Martha Washington: Portraits From the Presidential Years (Washington, D. C., 1999), 32. (General Reference).

Nicholas B. Wainwright, One Hundred and Fifty Years of Collecting by the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, 1824-1974. (Philadelphia: Historical Society of Pennsylvania, 1974),

Franklin D. Scott, Wertmuller- Artist and Immigrant Farmer (Chicago: Swedish Pioneer Historical Society, 1963) (General Reference).

Benisovich, Michel. "Further Notes on A. U. Wertmüller in the United States and France," The Art Quarterly 26, no. 1 (Spring 1963): 7-30. (General Reference).

Benisovich, Michel. "Wertmüller et son Livre de Raison intitulé La 'Notte'," Gazette des Beaux-Arts 6, no. 48 (July-August 1956): 35-68.

Benisovich, Michel, "The Sale of the Studio of Adolph-Ulrich Wertmüller," The Art Quarterly 16, no. 1 (Spring, 1953): 20-39. (General Reference).

William Sawitzky, Catalogue Descriptive and Critical of the Paintings and Miniatures in the Historical Society of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia: The Historical Society of Pennsylvania, 1942), catalogue 154.

John Hill Morgan and Mantle Fielding, The Life Portraits of Washington and Their Replicas (Philadelphia: 1932): 205, No.5.

Gustavus A. Eisen, Portraits of Washington, Vol. 2 (New York: Robert Hamilton, 1932), 479.

Charles Munn, “Growth of Interest in Washington Portraits,” The American Magazine of Art 10, no. 8 (JUNE, 1919): 279-286. (General Reference)

“The Exhibit of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.” The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 42, no. 4 (1918): 354.

George Washington Parke Custis and M. Russell Thayer, “George Washington Parke Custis's Opinion of Portraits of Washington,” The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 18, no. 1 (1894): 81-84. (General Reference).

Catalogue of the Paintings and Other Objects of Interest Belonging to the Historical Society of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia: Collins, 1872), no. 106.

Rembrandt Peale, “Reminiscences. Adolph Ulric Wertmuller,” The Crayon, 2, no. 14 (October 3, 1855): 207. (General Reference).
Mount Vernon's object research is ongoing and information about this object is subject to change. For information on image use and reproductions, click here.

There are no works to discover for this record.

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