View of the North [Hudson] River (Evening)
George Washington purchased several large-scale landscapes during his lifetime, including a pair by English-born artist, William Winstanley. Washington paid Winstanley 30 guineas or $140 for the two paintings on April 6, 1793. In a letter written at Philadelphia three days later, Alexander Hamilton commented on seeing the canvases in an upstairs room of the president's house, "There are two views of situations on Hudson's River painted by Mr Winstanly (sic), in the drawing Room of Mrs. Washington, which have great intrinsic merit…" In both images, the idyllic subject matter and picturesque composition take precedence over capturing precise location details.
Frame:
Gilded, rectangular wooden frame with mitered corners and molded faces embellished with composition material, including scallops along the outside edge, curled leaves at the corners, rosettes across the faces, and reeding and a string of pearls or beads along the inside edge.
SignedOn rock in lower left corner: "Win Winstanly/ 1793/ New York"
Published ReferencesJoseph Manca, George Washington's Eye: Landscape, Architecture, and Design at Mount Vernon (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2012), 169-171.
William M.S. Rasmussen and Robert S. Tilton, George Washington: The Man Behind the Myths (Charlottesville, VA: University Press of Virginia, 1999), 102-103, 185.
Wendell Garrett, ed., George Washington's Mount Vernon (New York: The Monacelli Press, 1998), 177-179, 182-183.
William Barrow Floyd, "The Portraits and Paintings at Mount Vernon from 1754-1799: Part 2," The Magazine Antiques (December 1971): 895-896.
James Thomas Flexner, The Light of Distant Skies (New York: Dover, 1969), 118.
George C. Groce and David H. Wallace, The New-York Historical Society's Dictionary of Artists in America, 1564-1860 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1957), 696.
J. Hall Pleasants, "Four Late Eighteenth Century Anglo-American Landscape Painters," reprinted from the Proceedings of American Antiquarian Society (Worcester, MA: American Antiquarian Society, 1943), 118-20.
William Macpherson Hornor, Jr., Blue Book of Philadelphia Furniture (Philadelphia: 1935), 287.
Bernard J. Lossing, Mount Vernon and its Associations Historical, Biographical, and Pictorial (New York: W. A. Townsend & Company, 1859), 319.