Ask the Scholar
Document scope · 4 pages
Scholar
Ask about this object, its catalog metadata, its source description, or the page inventory.
For page-specific OCR and visual context, open one of the page chats.
Source Description
The artist who completed this portrait was probably James L. Wattles, a portrait painter active in Baltimore from ca. 1829 to 1854. He is said to have been a rival of Alfred Jacob Miller in portraying Native Americans. Wattles seems to have had a son who painted portraits, J. Henry Wattles. He is known to have been living in Baltimore in 1842.The Marquis de Lafayette was a French aristocrat and military officer who served with distinction under George Washington in the American Revolutionary War. This is a copy of a portrait of the Marquis by the French artist of Dutch-German ancestry, Ary Scheffer. The portrait was brought to the United States during Lafayette's return trip, taken on the invitation of President James Munroe from 1824 to 1825, during which he toured widely. The Schaffer portrait can now be found in the House of Representatives in Washington DC. Other copies of the work exist, suggesting Lafayette's popular heroic status at this time.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
11418
label
Marquis De Lafayette
core
obj
dtoType
drawing
citationUrl
pageCount
4
Source metadata
id
11418
sourceUrl
contentType
drawing
stage
normalized
title
Marquis De Lafayette
description
The artist who completed this portrait was probably James L. Wattles, a portrait painter active in Baltimore from ca. 1829 to 1854. He is said to have been a rival of Alfred Jacob Miller in portraying Native Americans. Wattles seems to have had a son who painted portraits, J. Henry Wattles. He is known to have been living in Baltimore in 1842.The Marquis de Lafayette was a French aristocrat and military officer who served with distinction under George Washington in the American Revolutionary War. This is a copy of a portrait of the Marquis by the French artist of Dutch-German ancestry, Ary Scheffer. The portrait was brought to the United States during Lafayette's return trip, taken on the invitation of President James Munroe from 1824 to 1825, during which he toured widely. The Schaffer portrait can now be found in the House of Representatives in Washington DC. Other copies of the work exist, suggesting Lafayette's popular heroic status at this time.
provenance
Philip B. Perlman, Baltimore [date and mode of acquisition unknown]; Walters Art Museum, 1960, by bequest.
date
ca. 1840
citationUrl
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
Painting & Drawing
paintings
imageCount
4
pageCount
4
source
import
dimensions
units
cm
width
69.8
height
43
dimensionsRaw
Overall: H: 27 1/2 × W: 16 15/16 in. (69.8 × 43 cm)Framed: H: 30 15/16 × W: 20 5/16 × D: 2 3/16 in. (78.6 × 51.6 × 5.5 cm)
Source extras
med
oil on canvas
creator_ids
2584
collection_ids
EAN
exhibition_ids
none
Page inventory
seq
1
type
photo
mediaId
46506ebaedd21932
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no
seq
2
type
photo
mediaId
8784be09e6565adf
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no
seq
3
type
photo
mediaId
4dc56a80573a1d13
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no
seq
4
type
photo
mediaId
06f7dd570061d9ad
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no