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Source Description
This ink drawing is a "holograph"- a document written entirely by the hand of the person whose signature it bears. With words and images all supplied by the same pen, holographs represented a particular claim to authenticity. These were sought after in the first half of the 19th century by collectors who would assemble them into albums. This holograph is likely to have come into the Walters' collection from that of another Baltimore collector, Robert Gilmor.In this holograph by Morse, the poem, of the artist's own composition, dominates the page. The knight at the head of the poem gestures toward the distant future of 1965, where Morse imagines a reader so remote in time as to have neither form nor gender. His lofty tone and decorous call to virtue evokes sentiments similar to West's dedicatory inscription to the "youths of the United States of America" in another holograph of the almost the same date (WAM 37.1577).
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
9628
label
""To the Possessor of this Book in the year 1965...""
core
obj
dtoType
drawing
citationUrl
pageCount
3
Source metadata
id
9628
sourceUrl
contentType
drawing
stage
normalized
title
""To the Possessor of this Book in the year 1965...""
description
This ink drawing is a "holograph"- a document written entirely by the hand of the person whose signature it bears. With words and images all supplied by the same pen, holographs represented a particular claim to authenticity. These were sought after in the first half of the 19th century by collectors who would assemble them into albums. This holograph is likely to have come into the Walters' collection from that of another Baltimore collector, Robert Gilmor.In this holograph by Morse, the poem, of the artist's own composition, dominates the page. The knight at the head of the poem gestures toward the distant future of 1965, where Morse imagines a reader so remote in time as to have neither form nor gender. His lofty tone and decorous call to virtue evokes sentiments similar to West's dedicatory inscription to the "youths of the United States of America" in another holograph of the almost the same date (WAM 37.1577).
provenance
Robert Gilmor, Baltimore [date and mode of acquisition unknown] (?); Henry Walters, Baltimore [date and mode of acquisition unknown]; Walters Art Museum, 1931, by bequest.
date
March 1815
citationUrl
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
Painting & Drawing
holographs
imageCount
3
pageCount
3
source
import
dimensions
units
cm
width
27
height
17.2
dimensionsRaw
H: 10 5/8 x W: 6 3/4 in. (27 x 17.2 cm)
Source extras
inscriptions
[Signed at the end of the poem] Samuel F.B. Morse
med
ink on paper
creator_ids
7104
collection_ids
EAN
exhibition_ids
2830
2863
Page inventory
seq
1
type
photo
mediaId
7a49ff4048fc7076
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no
seq
2
type
photo
mediaId
7b427ddd600f7a7f
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no
seq
3
type
photo
mediaId
3124aa5ac646ff08
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no