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Source Description

Woodville painted himself several times during his short career. In this charming small work on panel, the artist sits in a parlor chair, facing the viewer while looking off to the left. His casual but fashionable attire includes a haphazardly buttoned tan jacket, a white shirt with black bow tie, a gray vest, and blue-green trousers with a checkerboard pattern - the height of contemporary fashion. Woodville holds an awkwardly proportioned black top hat in his green-gloved left hand; his ungloved right hand frames his face in a gesture of contemplation. The light brown wallpaper, with its repeating pattern of bouquets of pink roses, places the scene squarely in the domestic realm. Notable in this painting, as in others by the artist, is the contrast between the broadly worked clothing and awkward proportions of the headwear and the miniaturist technique of the carefully rendered face. The racially charged "science" of phrenology popular in the early decades of the nineteenth century held that inner character showed in external signs, particularly the head, "the seat of the intellectual . . . and moral organs." Woodville painted his own visage with loving detail, giving himself the broad forehead, aquiline nose, and white skin touched with color held up as the Anglo-Saxon ideal. The hand-to-face pose, suggesting pensive introspection, is found frequently in works after photographs during this period, as it held the head still through the long exposure the medium required. Woodville's career coincided with the popular introduction of the daguerreotype portrait; already in 1842, one of his professors at the University of Maryland Medical College, William A. E. Aiken, dabbled in the new technology.A photographic portrait of the artist from Düsseldorf (location unknown) shows that the painting was true to life. A Baltimore schoolmate remembered Woodville was "of aristocratic lineage, courtly manners and very handsome, he was essentially the artist." Already in Baltimore, he was sensitive to his appearance, and in Germany, his young wife noted in her ledger books numerous expenditures typical of a man of fashion: gloves, cravats, and costumes along with club dues, models, art supplies and "segars."

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
35049
label
Self-Portrait with Flowered Wallpaper
core
obj
dtoType
drawing
pageCount
4
Source metadata
id
35049
contentType
drawing
stage
normalized
title
Self-Portrait with Flowered Wallpaper
description
Woodville painted himself several times during his short career. In this charming small work on panel, the artist sits in a parlor chair, facing the viewer while looking off to the left. His casual but fashionable attire includes a haphazardly buttoned tan jacket, a white shirt with black bow tie, a gray vest, and blue-green trousers with a checkerboard pattern - the height of contemporary fashion. Woodville holds an awkwardly proportioned black top hat in his green-gloved left hand; his ungloved right hand frames his face in a gesture of contemplation. The light brown wallpaper, with its repeating pattern of bouquets of pink roses, places the scene squarely in the domestic realm. Notable in this painting, as in others by the artist, is the contrast between the broadly worked clothing and awkward proportions of the headwear and the miniaturist technique of the carefully rendered face. The racially charged "science" of phrenology popular in the early decades of the nineteenth century held that inner character showed in external signs, particularly the head, "the seat of the intellectual . . . and moral organs." Woodville painted his own visage with loving detail, giving himself the broad forehead, aquiline nose, and white skin touched with color held up as the Anglo-Saxon ideal. The hand-to-face pose, suggesting pensive introspection, is found frequently in works after photographs during this period, as it held the head still through the long exposure the medium required. Woodville's career coincided with the popular introduction of the daguerreotype portrait; already in 1842, one of his professors at the University of Maryland Medical College, William A. E. Aiken, dabbled in the new technology.A photographic portrait of the artist from Düsseldorf (location unknown) shows that the painting was true to life. A Baltimore schoolmate remembered Woodville was "of aristocratic lineage, courtly manners and very handsome, he was essentially the artist." Already in Baltimore, he was sensitive to his appearance, and in Germany, his young wife noted in her ledger books numerous expenditures typical of a man of fashion: gloves, cravats, and costumes along with club dues, models, art supplies and "segars."
provenance
Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Versen, prior to 1989 [by descent, from the artist]; Walters Art Museum, 1989, by gift.
date
1848-1850 (?)
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
Painting & Drawing
oil paintings (visual works)
imageCount
4
pageCount
4
source
import
dimensions
units
cm
width
23.2
height
17.5
dimensionsRaw
H: 9 1/8 x W: 6 7/8 in. (23.2 x 17.5 cm); Framed: H: 13 11/16 x W: 11 3/16 x D: 2 13/16 in. (34.7 x 28.4 x 7.1 cm)
Source extras
med
oil on panel
creator_ids
2112
collection_ids
EAN
exhibition_ids
2834
Page inventory
seq
1
type
photo
mediaId
0671ae0359bb9349
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no
seq
2
type
photo
mediaId
2cd032a614293f0d
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no
seq
3
type
photo
mediaId
d63f198d534f4617
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no
seq
4
type
photo
mediaId
d7799cc907152127
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no