Difference between revisions of "Depictions of Wythe"

From Wythepedia: The George Wythe Encyclopedia
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choices="SilvetteWythe1979.jpg|GeorgeWythePortrait.jpg|BacheSilhouette.jpg|BenbridgeWythe.jpg|Trumbull1791Wythe.jpg|GreatAmericanLawyers1907Wythe.jpg|Longacre1823Wythe.jpg|Rosenthal1888Wythe.jpg|Erekson1876Wythe.jpg|Crossman1927Wythe.jpg|Leney1807Wythe.jpg" />
 
choices="SilvetteWythe1979.jpg|GeorgeWythePortrait.jpg|BacheSilhouette.jpg|BenbridgeWythe.jpg|Trumbull1791Wythe.jpg|GreatAmericanLawyers1907Wythe.jpg|Longacre1823Wythe.jpg|Rosenthal1888Wythe.jpg|Erekson1876Wythe.jpg|Crossman1927Wythe.jpg|Leney1807Wythe.jpg" />
As a signer of the [[Declaration of Independence]], George Wythe's portrait was much sought after by artists.
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In an 1806 letter to the painter, [[Jefferson-Peale Correspondence|Charles Willson Peale]] (1741 &ndash; 1827), [[Thomas Jefferson]] laments that he only has a "shade in profile" of his friend and mentor, [[George Wythe]], "whose portrait was never taken."<ref>[[http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/mtj.mtjbib016602 Jefferson to Charles Willson Peale, 22 November 1806]], ''The Thomas Jefferson Papers,'' Series 1, General Correspondence, 1651-1827, Library of Congress.</ref> Jefferson sent Peale a copy of the profile, from which a portrait was made by "filling the out line of your late friend Judge Wythe. Whether you may find it equally striking as to likeness I cannot say, for my remembrance has not furnished me with any Idea's of the form of his features, therefore it is all guess work."<ref>[[http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/mtj.mtjbib016670  Charles Willson Peale to Jefferson, 13 December 1806]], ''The Thomas Jefferson Papers,'' Series 1, General Correspondence, 1651-1827, Library of Congress.</ref> The current location of Peale's portrait of Wythe is unknown, and it was probably dispersed with Jefferson's estate after his death.
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Despite what Jefferson tells us, there is a portrait identified as Wythe&mdash;in minature&mdash;in the collection of the [[http://www.rwnaf.org/collections/item?id=1617 R.W. Norton Art Gallery,] in Shreveport, Louisiana, attributed to [[wikipedia:Henry Benbridge|Henry Benbridge]] (1743 &ndash; 1812). It is a watercolor on ivory, 1&frac12; inches tall by 1&frac14; wide, and depicts Wythe as a young man. A 1971 text on Benbridge published by the Smithsonian Institution's [http://www.npg.si.edu/ National Portrait Gallery,] states, however: "Since the history of this portrait does not go back beyond 1941, it is suspect. The technique is not characteristically Benbridge."<ref>Robert G. Stewart, ''Henry Benbridge (1743-1812): American Portrait Painter,'' (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1971), 81.</ref> This does not necessarily mean it is not an authentic portrait of Wythe.
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Wythe's profile in shadow (or "shade," as Jefferson describes it) was taken twice: once, in 1804, by William Bache (1771 &ndash; 1845); and another at an earlier time in Wythe's life. William DuVal describes the two profiles in a letter to Thomas Jefferson in December, 1806, after Wythe's death: "The profile you have, will shew his appearance at that period of his Life, & the one I have, will exhibit a strong likeness a few years before his untimely Death"
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==Images of George Wythe==
 
==Images of George Wythe==
  
 
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File:BenbridgeWythe.jpg|Miniature by Henry Benbridge (c. 1770). Original at the [http://www.rwnaf.org/collections/item?id=1617 R.W. Norton Art Gallery,] Shreveport, Louisiana.
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File:BenbridgeWythe.jpg|Miniature, attributed to Henry Benbridge (c. 1770). Original at the [http://www.rwnaf.org/collections/item?id=1617 R.W. Norton Art Gallery,] Shreveport, Louisiana.
 
File:Trumbull1791Wythe.jpg|Pencil sketch from life, by John Trumbull, in Williamsburg (1791). Image courtesy of the [http://www.history.org/ Colonial Williamsburg Foundation.]
 
File:Trumbull1791Wythe.jpg|Pencil sketch from life, by John Trumbull, in Williamsburg (1791). Image courtesy of the [http://www.history.org/ Colonial Williamsburg Foundation.]
 
File:BacheSilhouette.jpg|William Bache silhouette (1804). From [https://catalog.swem.wm.edu/law/Record/593884 ''Shades of Our Ancestors,''] by Alice Van Leer Carrick (1928).  
 
File:BacheSilhouette.jpg|William Bache silhouette (1804). From [https://catalog.swem.wm.edu/law/Record/593884 ''Shades of Our Ancestors,''] by Alice Van Leer Carrick (1928).  

Revision as of 13:19, 4 April 2014

Stipple engraving of George Wythe by J.B. Longacre, illustration from volume one of Great American Lawyers, edited by William Draper Lewis (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: John C. Winston, 1907).

In an 1806 letter to the painter, Charles Willson Peale (1741 – 1827), Thomas Jefferson laments that he only has a "shade in profile" of his friend and mentor, George Wythe, "whose portrait was never taken."[1] Jefferson sent Peale a copy of the profile, from which a portrait was made by "filling the out line of your late friend Judge Wythe. Whether you may find it equally striking as to likeness I cannot say, for my remembrance has not furnished me with any Idea's of the form of his features, therefore it is all guess work."[2] The current location of Peale's portrait of Wythe is unknown, and it was probably dispersed with Jefferson's estate after his death.

Despite what Jefferson tells us, there is a portrait identified as Wythe—in minature—in the collection of the [R.W. Norton Art Gallery, in Shreveport, Louisiana, attributed to Henry Benbridge (1743 – 1812). It is a watercolor on ivory, 1½ inches tall by 1¼ wide, and depicts Wythe as a young man. A 1971 text on Benbridge published by the Smithsonian Institution's National Portrait Gallery, states, however: "Since the history of this portrait does not go back beyond 1941, it is suspect. The technique is not characteristically Benbridge."[3] This does not necessarily mean it is not an authentic portrait of Wythe.

Wythe's profile in shadow (or "shade," as Jefferson describes it) was taken twice: once, in 1804, by William Bache (1771 – 1845); and another at an earlier time in Wythe's life. William DuVal describes the two profiles in a letter to Thomas Jefferson in December, 1806, after Wythe's death: "The profile you have, will shew his appearance at that period of his Life, & the one I have, will exhibit a strong likeness a few years before his untimely Death"


Images of George Wythe

See also

  • [Jefferson to Charles Willson Peale, 22 November 1806], The Thomas Jefferson Papers, Series 1, General Correspondence, 1651-1827, Library of Congress.
  • [Charles Willson Peale to Jefferson, 13 December 1806], The Thomas Jefferson Papers, Series 1, General Correspondence, 1651-1827, Library of Congress.
  • Robert G. Stewart, Henry Benbridge (1743-1812): American Portrait Painter, (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1971), 81.