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Source Description

The earliest dated record of Justus Dalee's activity is this fifty-two page sketchbook entitled "Emblematic Figures, Representations and Etc. to Please the Eye." It is a homemade hand-sown volume. The facing pages show finished watercolor and ink compositions, pencil or watercolor and ink renderings, and unfinished or preliminary sketches in pencil, with some page left blank. The illuminated title page is dated "May 19th, 1826," and the latest dated drawing in the book is inscribed "February 12th, 1827." Several of the drawings are signed in full, and on one page he titled himself "Professor of Penmanship." At least four drawings are copies after printed plates in an early edition of an art instruction manual, "The Oxford Drawing Book." Several others appear to be a copies of engraved fashion plates with floral embellishments.Dalee was a school teacher in New York State and is also known to have worked in Massachusetts. He is best known for his miniature portraits in profile and family records or registers. Probably born in 1791 he is known to have been active between 1826 and 1848. He is last documented as a "grocer" in Rochester New York from 1848-9.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
91886
label
Emblematical Figures, Representations and Etc. to Please the Eye
core
obj
dtoType
book
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
91886
contentType
book
stage
normalized
title
Emblematical Figures, Representations and Etc. to Please the Eye
description
The earliest dated record of Justus Dalee's activity is this fifty-two page sketchbook entitled "Emblematic Figures, Representations and Etc. to Please the Eye." It is a homemade hand-sown volume. The facing pages show finished watercolor and ink compositions, pencil or watercolor and ink renderings, and unfinished or preliminary sketches in pencil, with some page left blank. The illuminated title page is dated "May 19th, 1826," and the latest dated drawing in the book is inscribed "February 12th, 1827." Several of the drawings are signed in full, and on one page he titled himself "Professor of Penmanship." At least four drawings are copies after printed plates in an early edition of an art instruction manual, "The Oxford Drawing Book." Several others appear to be a copies of engraved fashion plates with floral embellishments.Dalee was a school teacher in New York State and is also known to have worked in Massachusetts. He is best known for his miniature portraits in profile and family records or registers. Probably born in 1791 he is known to have been active between 1826 and 1848. He is last documented as a "grocer" in Rochester New York from 1848-9.
provenance
Miss Dorothy Kent Hill [mode of acquisition unknown], before 1974; Walters Art Museum, 1974, by gift.
date
1826-1827
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
books
sketch
imageCount
1
pageCount
1
source
import
hasTranscription
no
Source extras
med
watercolor, ink
cul
dimensions
creator_ids
6717
collection_ids
EAN
exhibition_ids
none
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
970a8f813b04a994