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Source Description
This intergenerational drama is set in a sumptuously furnished dining room. A young soldier, his injured left arm in a sling, his boots and trousers mud-spattered, and sword and gloves flung on the carpet, has just returned from service in the Mexican War. Gesturing expansively toward the Revolutionary portrait, he seeks approval from his older relative, who appears lost in memory. Other family members, presumably the soldier's parents and sister, dressed in the fashion of the moment, listen with concern. In the doorway to the right, three African American house servants attend to the conversation. Old '76's status as a veteran of the Revolutionary War is made clear by attributes, including knee breeches worn in the previous century, the portrait in military dress on the far wall, and the bust of George Washington behind him. The painting rewards close scrutiny, with such unexpected details as an apple and corncob interspersed with the clock, porcelains, lamps, and book on the mantelpiece, the tabletop still-life, and the adroit rendering of textiles and furniture. The glass on the print of Trumbull's Signing of the Declaration of Independence shows a crack, a symbol of the divisiveness of the political moment. Woodville may have seen this detail in a work of decisive political content in Düsseldorf, Workers before the Magistrate by Johann Peter Hasenclever, painted in 1848. One of the puzzles posed by Old '76 and Young '48 is how the artist, living in Europe, acquired his knowledge of the specifics of the Mexican War uniform, in which shoulder straps indicated rank and stripes on trousers denoted different regiments, details that Woodville changed as he completed the painting. No one in his immediate family served in that war, though his friend Stedman Tilghman enlisted as a surgeon in 1846 and succumbed to the strain, dying in New Orleans two years later. Woodville may have studied illustrations in American newspapers or daguerreotypes. Clearly aware of the polarized opinion on this war in the United States, and having suffered a personal loss, the artist takes an ambiguous stance in the argument that is this work's central narrative.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
33726
label
Old '76 and Young '48
core
obj
dtoType
drawing
citationUrl
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
33726
sourceUrl
contentType
drawing
stage
normalized
title
Old '76 and Young '48
description
This intergenerational drama is set in a sumptuously furnished dining room. A young soldier, his injured left arm in a sling, his boots and trousers mud-spattered, and sword and gloves flung on the carpet, has just returned from service in the Mexican War. Gesturing expansively toward the Revolutionary portrait, he seeks approval from his older relative, who appears lost in memory. Other family members, presumably the soldier's parents and sister, dressed in the fashion of the moment, listen with concern. In the doorway to the right, three African American house servants attend to the conversation. Old '76's status as a veteran of the Revolutionary War is made clear by attributes, including knee breeches worn in the previous century, the portrait in military dress on the far wall, and the bust of George Washington behind him. The painting rewards close scrutiny, with such unexpected details as an apple and corncob interspersed with the clock, porcelains, lamps, and book on the mantelpiece, the tabletop still-life, and the adroit rendering of textiles and furniture. The glass on the print of Trumbull's Signing of the Declaration of Independence shows a crack, a symbol of the divisiveness of the political moment. Woodville may have seen this detail in a work of decisive political content in Düsseldorf, Workers before the Magistrate by Johann Peter Hasenclever, painted in 1848. One of the puzzles posed by Old '76 and Young '48 is how the artist, living in Europe, acquired his knowledge of the specifics of the Mexican War uniform, in which shoulder straps indicated rank and stripes on trousers denoted different regiments, details that Woodville changed as he completed the painting. No one in his immediate family served in that war, though his friend Stedman Tilghman enlisted as a surgeon in 1846 and succumbed to the strain, dying in New Orleans two years later. Woodville may have studied illustrations in American newspapers or daguerreotypes. Clearly aware of the polarized opinion on this war in the United States, and having suffered a personal loss, the artist takes an ambiguous stance in the argument that is this work's central narrative.
provenance
American Art-Union Sale, New York, 1852; purchased by William H. Webb, New York, 1852. Acquired by George William Abell, Baltimore, before 1894; Mrs. Francis Theodore Homer [Jennie M. Abell], Baltimore; Mrs. Ferdinand C. Lee [Jane Palfrey Homer], Baltimore. Acquired by Mr. and Mrs. George Jenkins, Baltimore, November 12, 1954; purchased by Walters Art Museum, 1954.
date
1849
citationUrl
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
Painting & Drawing
oil paintings (visual works)
imageCount
1
pageCount
1
source
import
dimensions
units
cm
width
53.7
height
68.3
depth
2.9
dimensionsRaw
H: 21 1/8 × W: 26 7/8 × D: 1 1/8 in. (53.66 × 68.26 × 2.86 cm); Framed H: 34 × W: 39 3/4 × D: 6 1/8 in. (86.36 × 101 × 15.56 cm)
Source extras
inscriptions
[Signed and dated] Lower left: R.C. Woodville. 1849
med
oil on canvas
creator_ids
2112
collection_ids
EAN
exhibition_ids
1981
2834
2160
2535
3082
3158
3300
3425
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
70957742793b9830