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OCR Page 1 of 5(Huebner) RP
November 16, 1970
SUGGESTED REMARKS - Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
Background:
Note that the name of this institution is "The Pennsylvania Academy
of THE Fine Arts. 11 It is the oldest public art gallery in America and is
considered to have one of the four best collections of American art in the
world. The exhibition which is being opened is called "to save a Heritage"
and features works which have been recovered and/or restored.
The Stuart portrait of Dolley Madison which now hangs in the Red
Room was loaned to the White House by this institution constitutes the
first extended loan of works of art outside of Philadelphia in the history
of the Academy. Four or five other paintings are also on loan from the
Academy to the White House at this time.
The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts was founded 165 years
ago by Joseph Hopkinson and other interested townspeople who met first
at the home of Charles Willson Peale. The formal petition for an act of
incorporation was signed on the day after Christmas, 1805, in the
Declaration Chamber at Independence Hall. Robert Fulton's collection
of paintings formed the basis of the Academy's collection. The present
building was designed by the famous architect Frank Furness and
completed in 1876 in time for the centennial celebration of that year.
Philadelphia has been a center of American painting throughout our
history. The ranks of great Philadelphia painters include Gilbert Stuart,
the Peales (a family whose paintings are well represented at the White
House), Thomas Eakins (Ay-kins) who painted in the late nineteenth
century. The Philadelphia area, of course, has given us the Wyeths.
The three restored works which are being unveiled on this occasion
are: "George Frederick Cooke as Richard III" by Thomas Sully; William
Adolphe Bouguereau's "The Choephorae" and "The First City Troop on
Parade" by William Becker. (They are supposed to represent the American
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