George Washington
This miniature is unusual is several ways. In addition to its enlarged round format, it depicts George Washington in a continental army uniform but with incongruous red lapels, and with very close-set brown eyes. These details suggest that the miniature was not made from life, but from a black and white print, and that the artist did not know that Washington’s lapels were buff and his eyes were blue. Signed “John Robinson,” it may have been created by the English-born artist of that name who appeared in Philadelphia in 1817.
The background is in very light shades of ivory to beige and gray tones, and painted with much thicker strokes than most miniatures.
The square-shaped frame is of dark brown wood. It has a circular inset to correspond to the miniature and a metal ring hanger.
SignedAlong the lower left side in brown ink at approximately 8 o'clock: “John Robinson. f.”
Published ReferencesDaphne Foskett, Miniatures: A Dictionary and Guide (Suffolk, England: Antique Collectors Club, 1987), 630. (General Reference)
Mantle Fielding, Dictionary of American Painters, Sculptors, and Engravers (Greens Farms, Connecticut: Modern Books and Crafts, Inc. 1974), 305. (General Reference)
George Groce and David Wallace, The New York Historical Society’s Dictionary of Artists in America 1564-1860 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1957), 542. (General Reference)
Theodore Bolton, Early American Portrait Painters in Miniature (New York: Frederic Fairchild Sherman, 1921), 137. (General Reference)