George Washington
This miniature of George Washington, likely by Ellen Sharples, is thought to have been owned and worn by Martha Washington, and then given to her granddaughter, Elizabeth Parke Custis Law, in whose family it descended. The work is unique within the large body of Sharples portraits of George Washington: it alone merges the attire of the Continental army uniform portraits with the format of the profile portraits. Washington’s countenance appears nearly majestic, and his image dominates the frame, with very little background shown. He appears handsome and youthful, with softened features.
His thinning hair is powdered and worn ‘en queue’ with a black queue bag, long sideburns and fullness over the ears. It is painted with fine white lines and hatching over slightly darker gray.
The ground is polychromatic with an overall effect of khaki green.
The case is of gilded copper with a fixed single loop and an empty hair mount on the verso with dark brown fabric encased under glass. The miniature, encircled by a band of gold, is encased under glass and within a very narrow copper band which has been set inside the larger decorative mount casing. The external casing is decorated with an incised foliated pattern, and 13 copper stars and a larger one at the top, on the loop.
Published ReferencesKatherine McCook Knox, The Sharples (New York: Kennedy Graphics, Inc. 1972), cat. 50, and illustrated on the jacket cover, 90-91.
“George Washington Relics,” Baltimore Sun, February 16, 1958, 5.
Theodore Bolton, Eearly American Portrait Painters in Miniature (New York: Frederic Fairchild Sherman, 1921), p. 142-143.
Catalogue of the Loan Exhibition Under the Auspices of the National Society of Colonial Dames of America,” The Octagon, Washington, D.C., April 17 – April 21, 1906. (Number 449.)
Portraits, Relics, and Silverware Exhibited at the Metropolitan Opera House, New York, April 17th to May 8th, 1889 (New York: Trow’s Printing and Bookbinding Company, 1889), 7.
Elizabeth Bryant Johnston, Original Portraits of Washington (Boston: James R. Osgood and Company, 1882), 132.