Comparison of Painting of George Washington by Gilbert Stuart and Charles Willson Peale

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On Saturday, March 15, 2014, I visited the Metropolitan Museum in New York. The gallery #753, which is a part of so-called American Wing, features oil paintings of the revolutionary period in America. The paintings seen in this gallery celebrate heroes and hard-fought battles of the new nation. The most popular type of painting of that time remained portraiture. Portraits in extremely large numbers figured in interiors, where they were arranged to convey not only domestic, but political messages as well. Hence, it is natural, that such iconic figure like George Washington became a model for numerous artists of that era, including Gilbert Stuart and Charles Willson Peale, for whom Washington actually sat. Two exceptional portraits of Washington, the general and the the first President of the United States are highlighted in this paper.
Charles Willson Peale was an artist, inventor, scientist and writer and a great friend of George Washington. During the revolutionary war, he participated in the battles at Trenton and Princeton and was made a captain (Luhrs 116). In 1779, since the war was almost ended, Peale was commissioned to paint a full-length portrait of George Washington for he meeting room of the Supreme Executive Council of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia (Barratt 25). The elegant and informal image portrayed the general at the site of his triumph. The tall confident figure of Washington stands in a relaxed position with one hand resting on a cannon, which symbollizes the victory that is being celebrated, as do the captured Hessian flags that lie at his feet.
The painting was so popular, that he made its numerous versions with sightliest differences. The version presented in Metropolitan Museum, descended through the famil...

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...duced his sitters into conversation, so he could record not only sitter's appearance, but his personality. However, he struggled to engage the president, who apparently hated to sit for his portrait (McLanathan 83). The artist was not entirely satisfied with the picture, that he felt could not convey "the expression he knew must accord with such features and such a man" (McLanathan 83). Though the many, including the president's old friends, found it a compelling likeness (McLanathan 84). This project brought Gilbert Stuart international fame. He executed at least seventy replicas of the portrait and many other artists were able to use it as the basis for their work (McLanathan 85). At that time portraits were painted to celebrate national achievements and public heroes, and so Stuart satisfied the need of the new nation for lasting images of early national leaders.

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