Louisiana Indians Walking Along a Bayou Boisseau, Alfred, 1847
Louisiana Indians Walking Along a Bayou Boisseau, Alfred, 1847
Another influence on the character of Louisiana culture was that of the
indigenous population. Indian ideas were an indispensable source for early
settlers trying to adapt to the region, and this assimilation was mutual, as
illustrated by Alfred Boisseau’s Indians Walking Along the Bayou. A
hybridization of culture can be seen in this work, for the child carries Indian
implements, the man carries an American rifle, and the clothing is Indian in
style but cut from European or American fabrics.
The New Orleans Museum of Art’s permanent collection includes noteworthy
works by American artists from the 18th Century to the present day. John
Singleton Copley, represented at NOMA by his Portrait of Colonel George Watson,
was the most skilled artist practicing in the American colonies before the
Revolution. Benjamin West, a trend-setter in the late 18th and early 19th
Centuries, forecast both the Neo-Classic and Romantic movements in his
paintings. Renowned portrait artists Charles Willson Peale, Thomas Sully and
Gilbert Stuart are also represented with important works. A highlight of the
collection is John Singer Sargent’s elegant Portrait of Mrs. Asher Wertheimer,
painted in 1898.
Portrait Bust of George Washington ca, 1816 by Ceracchi, Giuseppe The work
on view was originally commissioned by the City of New Orleans
Portrait Bust of George Washington ca, 1816 by Ceracchi, Giuseppe The work
on view was originally commissioned by the City of New Orleans
Portrait Bust of George Washington ca, 1816 by Ceracchi, Giuseppe The work
on view was originally commissioned by the City of New Orleans
Portrait Bust of George Washington ca, 1816 by Ceracchi, Giuseppe The work
on view was originally commissioned by the City of New Orleans
Portrait of Colonel George Watson (1718-1800) 1768 Copley, John Singleton
Oil on canvas
Portrait of Colonel George Watson (1718-1800) 1768 Copley, John Singleton
Oil on canvas
Rare and Important American Gothic Revival Oak Hall Chairs, possibly New
Orleans, mid-19th century, the tall back supported by pierced and carved stiles
terminating in crocketed spires, the central pierced and carved splat with an
additional carved spire, the solid plank seat with molded edge hinged along the
back edge and opening to a void cavity, supported by pierced front legs, h. 71".
This chair belongs to a small but important group of furniture associated with
the Antebellum South. Related chairs have been found in Vicksburg, New Orleans,
and most notably Stanton Hall Plantation in Natchez, Mississippi. It has been
suggested that New Orleans may have been the source of this body of furniture
since the Stanton Hall examples were invoiced by Henry Siebrecht of New Orleans.
Related examples are in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New
York, the Bybee Collection, the Dallas Museum of Art, the Henry Francis duPont
Winterthur Museum and the New Orleans Museum of Art. A mate to the Winterthur
chair sold at New Orleans Auction Galleries in March, 1998, for $40,700, and
another sidechair in March, 2000, for $56,000. The New Orleans Auction St.
Charles Gallery sold the matching recamier in April, 1998, for $44,000.
I agree with you that John Singleton Copley was one of the best artists practicing in the American colonies before the Revolution. And I also like Benjamin West, Charles Willson Peale and Gilbert Stuart. But I don't know of Thomas Sully.
ReplyDeleteI assume the man pointing to the loyal dog is Colonel George Watson by Copley. What a delightful portrait.
oops no, I was wrong.
ReplyDeleteWho was the man pointing to his dog? And who painted it?
Hi Hels you found the Copley. The portrait of the man with a dog is by a English artist working in pre-revolutionary America. I don't know his name but will find out for you. Thomas Sully was a great American artist trained in the English style of painting he painted Queen Victoria from life.
ReplyDelete