American artist and museum keeper (1778?1860)
This article is about the American artist. For the Dutch painter, see
Rembrandt
.
Rembrandt Peale
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![](//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/55/Rembrandt_Peale_self-portrait.jpg/220px-Rembrandt_Peale_self-portrait.jpg) |
Born
| (
1778-02-22
)
February 22, 1778
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Died
| October 3, 1860
(1860-10-03)
(aged 82)
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Nationality
| American
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Education
| Paris
(1808), (1809?1810),
Great Britain
(1832)
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Known for
| Artist
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Notable work
| Rubens Peale with a Geranium
,
George Washington, Patriae Pater
,
Court of Death
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Movement
| Neoclassical
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Patron(s)
| Charles Willson Peale
,
George Washington
,
Thomas Jefferson
,
Rubens Peale
,
John Marshall
,
John C. Calhoun
,
Charles Mathews
,
Jean-Antoine Houdon
,
DeWitt Clinton
,
Thomas Sumter
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|
Rembrandt Peale
(February 22, 1778 ? October 3, 1860) was an American artist and museum keeper. A prolific portrait painter, he was especially acclaimed for his likenesses of presidents
George Washington
and
Thomas Jefferson
. Peale's style was influenced by
French neoclassicism
after a stay in Paris in his early thirties.
Early life and education
[
edit
]
1795 miniature of Peale by his uncle,
James Peale
Peale was born on February 22, 1778, near present-day
Richboro, Pennsylvania
, in
Bucks County
Pennsylvania
, the third of six surviving children (11 had died) to his mother, Rachel Brewer, and father,
Charles Willson Peale
, in Bucks County. His father was also a notable artist, and named him after the noted 17th-century Dutch painter and engraver
Rembrandt
Harmenszoon van Rijn. His father also taught all of his children, including
Raphaelle Peale
,
Rubens Peale
, and
Titian Peale
, to paint scenery and portraiture, and tutored Rembrandt in the arts and sciences.
Rembrandt began drawing at the age of eight. A year after his mother's death and the remarriage of his father, Peale left the school of the arts, and completed his first self-portrait at the age of 13. The canvas displays the young artist's early mastery. The clothes, however, give the notion that Peale exaggerated what a 13-year-old would look like, and Peale's hair curls like the hair of a Renaissance angel. Later in his life, Peale "often showed this painting to young beginners, to encourage them to go from 'bad' to better..."
[1]
Career
[
edit
]
In July 1787, Charles Willson Peale introduced his son Rembrandt to
George Washington
, and the young aspirant artist watched his father paint the future president. In 1795, at the age of 17, Rembrandt painted an aging Washington, making him appear far more aged than in reality. The portrait was well received, and Rembrandt had made his debut.
In 1822, Peale moved to New York City, where he embarked on an attempt to paint what he hoped would become the "standard likeness" of Washington. He studied portraits by other artists including
John Trumbull
,
Gilbert Stuart
and his own father, as well as his own 1795 picture which had never truly satisfied him. His resulting work
Patriae Pater
, completed in 1824, depicts Washington through an oval window, and is considered by many to be second only to Gilbert Stuart's iconic Athenaeum painting of the first president. Peale subsequently attempted to capitalize on the success of what quickly became known as his "Porthole" picture.
Patriae Pater
(Latin for "Father of Our Country") was purchased by Congress in 1832 for $2,000. It currently hangs in the Old Senate Chamber.
[2]
In 1826, he helped found the
National Academy of Design
in
New York City
.
Peale went on to create over 70 detailed replicas, including one of Washington in full military uniform that currently hangs in the
Oval Office
. Peale continued to paint other noted portraits, such as those of the third president Thomas Jefferson while he was in office (1805), and later on a portrait of Chief Justice
John Marshall
.
Travels
[
edit
]
The Roman Daughter
(1811)
Noted for his "itinerant" nature, Peale visited Europe several times to study art (Ward). Throughout his life, Peale traveled across the western hemisphere in search of inspiration and opportunities as an artist. His father helped pay his way to Paris, where he stayed from June to September 1808, and again from October 1809 to November 1810. In Paris, Peale studied the works of
Jacques-Louis David
, which influenced him to paint in the Neoclassical style. He painted the famous explorer
Alexander von Humboldt
and several other noted patrons such as
Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac
and
Francois Andre Michaux
. After his successes in France, Peale returned to Philadelphia in 1810.
His efforts to establish his knowledge and mastery of art were displayed in his painting
The Roman Daughter
(1811). The painting depicts a young girl shielding her father, a prisoner in chains, and feeding him from her breast, the emblem of "
Roman Charity
" reported in the pages of Pliny. It was deemed too "sensational" by the people of Philadelphia,
[3]
who were unsympathetic to his endeavors toward "improving the state of fine arts in America" in the 19th century.
[4]
Amid the economic hardship of the
War of 1812
, President Jefferson?who promised to buy the 1795 portrait of Washington, but could not keep his promise?instead encouraged Peale to go to Europe, as "we have genius among us but no unemployed wealth to reward it".
[5]
Peale's Baltimore Museum
[
edit
]
Rembrandt Peale,
Rubens Peale with a Geranium
(1801)
Motivated by his father's establishment of the
Philadelphia Museum
(1786) and having been unsuccessful in Philadelphia, Rembrandt Peale assumed his father's role in another city. On August 15, 1814, Peale launched his first museum as soon as he arrived in the municipality of
Baltimore
, Maryland on Holliday Street between East Saratoga and Lexington Streets, the first building constructed in America to serve as a museum. It later served as the second Baltimore City Hall, 1830?1875; a "Colored" primary, grammar, and high school, part of Baltimore's segregated public school system, 1878?1889; and was restored in 1931 as the Municipal Museum of the City of Baltimore. Renovated and restored again in 1981, it reopened with a groundbreaking interpretive history exhibition, "Rowhouse: A Baltimore Style of Living." In 1985, the Municipal Museum, which had grown to five sites (Peale Museum, Carroll Mansion, 1840 House, Baltimore Center for Urban Archaeology, and H.L. Mencken House) was renamed Baltimore City Life Museums. It closed in 1997, a year after opening a new 30,000sf exhibition center.
The museum was elaborately illuminated by
gas light
, following the example of his brother
Rubens
in Philadelphia. This innovation made a great impression. Peale had acquired an important gas lighting patent, and with some associates founded the successful
Gas Light Company
of Baltimore. Having poor business sense, though, he did little to manage the company and was forced out after a few years due to the War of 1812.
[6]
[7]
In 1828, an ambitious Peale raised funds and tried earning money for his previous paintings, in order to travel to Rome. He took along his 15-year-old son, Michael Angelo, a determined young artist who copied his father's paintings in admiration.
[8]
Peale successfully displayed portraits of
Horatio Greenough
and Washington as
Patriæ Pater
in
the Florentine academy
.
At the age of 82, Peale died on October 3, 1860, at his house on 1506 Vine St in Philadelphia.
[9]
He is buried at Woodlands Cemetery in West Philadelphia.
Works
[
edit
]
"The oldest living American artist", Detail of a photograph of Rembrandt Peale taken by
Mathew B. Brady
between 1855 and 1860
Exhibited and discussed in "In Pursuit of Fame: Rembrandt Peale 1778?1860," Washington D.C., National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian institution, 1992–93, The portrait of Margaret Irvine Miller exemplifies Peale's ability to convey a story and capture character through taking liberty with the way in which he portrayed his sitters. Mrs. Miller, by birth working-class, later raised her position in Philadelphia society. Though her clothing is aristocratic, Mrs. Miller's pose and gaze are those of a straightforward, working-class woman. The subtle juxtaposition is masterfully captured in the finest of terms.
In 1801, Peale
painted a portrait
of his brother
Rubens
, youngest of the six Peale children, who always had an admiration for gardening and tending to natural life. Peale seated his brother next to a
geranium
. The painting signifies the artist's admiration for a sibling's love of nature, and may have been inspired by the Dutch 17th-century artist,
David Teniers the Younger
, who had painted a series of oil-on-copper paintings representing the five senses. His painting,
Smell
is quite similar to Rembrandt Peale's. Rembrandt's piece captures the essence of a young gardener/artist's peace of mind, gracefully looking out, a posture of wonder and calmness.
[10]
In 1824, Peale painted the
Patriæ Pater
, in which a rectangle supporting an oval wreath surrounds the eye-catching image of George Washington. The most successful painting of Peale's 50-year career, it inspired
John Marshall
to have his portrait done by Peale in the same fashion. The painting was criticized as lacking authenticity, as it was not completed until after Washington's death (1799). Nonetheless, Peale received commendations for his portrait by many noted politicians such as Washington's nephew, Judge
Bushrod Washington
, who was an associate U.S. Supreme Court Justice, and Marshall.
[11]
Peale's neoclassical painting
The Roman Daughter
demonstrates compassion and graceful defense; his copy of
Correggio
's Angel, and his immense allegorical painting,
Court of Death
(1820), reveal the same artistic style.
Personal life
[
edit
]
At the age of 20, Peale married 22-year-old Eleanor May Short (1776?1836) at
St. Joseph's Catholic Church
in
Philadelphia
.
[12]
During their marriage, Peale and Short had nine children:
Rosalba
, Eleanor, Michael Angelo, Angelica, and Emma Clara among them. In 1840, he married
Harriet Cany
(1799?1869), one of his pupils and an artist in her own right.
[13]
Legacy
[
edit
]
Portrait of George Washington
(1795?1823)
Ballou's Pictorial
, Volume XIII, October 17, 1857
Rembrandt Peale completed more than 600 paintings. He painted portraits of many notable people, including American presidents George Washington and Thomas Jefferson,
[14]
Chief Justice John Marshall,
[15]
and John C. Calhoun. His paintings are in many public collections.
Collections
[
edit
]
Portrait of
Rosalba Peale
(1820),
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Portrait of Edward Shippen Burd of Philadelphia
(
c.
1806
?1808)
The following is a partial list of collections holding works by Rembrandt Peale:
- Washington, D.C.:
National Museum of American Art
and
National Portrait Gallery
, The
Smithsonian Institution
- Baltimore, Maryland: The Peale Museum,
Baltimore Museum of Art
,
Maryland Historical Society
,
Walters Art Museum
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: The Historical Society of Pennsylvania,
Atwater Kent Museum
,
Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts
- Detroit, Michigan:
Detroit Institute of Arts
- Columbus, Georgia: The Columbus Museum
- Birmingham, Alabama:
Birmingham Museum of Art
- New York: Brooklyn Museum, The Peale Museum of New York
- New London, Connecticut
:
Lyman Allyn Art Museum
- Dallas, Texas: The
Dallas Museum of Art
Modern American Collection
- Pittsfield, Massachusetts:
Berkshire Museum
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania:
La Salle University Art Museum
[16]
- Williamsburg, Virginia:
Muscarelle Museum of Art
at
William & Mary
- Wilmington, Delaware:
Hagley Museum and Library
Other notable paintings
[
edit
]
- Charles Willson Peale,
Historical Society of Pennsylvania
, Philadelphia, 1812
- Washington Before Yorktown,
Corcoran Gallery of Art
, 1824
- John C. Calhoun,
Gibbes Museum of Art
, 1834
- The Sisters, Eleanor and Rosalba Peale,
A. Augustus Healy Fund,
Brooklyn Museum
, 1826
- General Thomas Sumter,
Independence National Historical Park
, Philadelphia, 1796
- Mrs. Marbury,
Private Collection, 1797
- Sculpture,
Atwater Kent Museum
, Philadelphia,
c.
1812
- DeWitt Clinton,
Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, 1823
- Mary Jane Peale
,
Elise Peale Patterson de Golpi-Toro, New York, 1835
- Eleanor May Short Peale,
Private Collection, 1836
- William Henry Harrison,
Grouseland (William Henry Harrison House), Vincennes, IN
A portrait identified
[
edit
]
A painting of a comedian who was an acquaintance of the British painter
George Clint
?an artist whose style resembled Peale's, and who claimed the picture as his own?was examined by the National Portrait Gallery of London in 1914. It was initially confirmed as Clint's artwork. Later, the gallery further examined the history behind the painting: the English comedian, Charles Mathews, had arrived in New York in 1822, and left shortly after Peale had welcomed him for a portrait painting.
[17]
Gallery
[
edit
]
-
Working Sketch of the Mastodon
(1801)
-
-
Samuel Fisher Bradford
(1803?1808)
-
Albert Gallatin
(1805)
-
Portrait of Margaret Irvine Miller
(1805)
-
Portrait of William Short
(1806)
-
Portrait of Henry Robinson
(1806?1808)
-
Portrait of Rubens Peale
(1807)
-
Alida Livingston Armstrong and Daughter
(
c.
1810
)
-
Boy from the
Taylor Family
(1812)
-
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Portrait of Jacob Gerard Koch
(
c.
1817
)
-
Portrait of Jane Griffith Koch
(
c.
1817
)
-
General Samuel Smith
(
c.
1817
)
-
-
-
Washington Before
Yorktown
(1823)
-
Michelangelo and
Emma Clara Peale
(1826)
-
The Sisters (Eleanor and
Rosalba Peale
)
(1826)
-
Portrait of Dr.
David Hosack
(1826)
-
-
-
-
Caroline Louisa Pratt Bartlett
(1836)
-
Girl at a Window (
Rosalba Peale
)
(1846)
-
Niagara Falls
(1849)
-
Portraits of
Richard Colgate Dale Jr
and
Elizabeth Woodruff Dale
(1857)
Notes
[
edit
]
- ^
Miller, Lillian B.
Rembrandt Peale: A Life in the Arts: 1778?1860
. The Historical Society of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, 1985
- ^
U.S. Senate Art & History,
A Finding Aid to the Rembrandt and Harriet Peale Collection, c. 1820?1932
.
- ^
Miller, Lillian B.
Rembrandt Peale: A Life in the Arts: 1778?1860
. The Historical Society of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, 1985, p. 15
- ^
Mahey, John A. “The Studio of Rembrandt Peale.” American Art Journal, Vol. 1, No. 2. (Autumn, 1969), pp. 20?40
- ^
Ward, David C. "Celebration of Self: The Portraiture of Charles Willson Peale and Rembrandt Peale, 1822?27.” American Art, Vol. 7, No. 1. (Winter, 1993), p. 17.
- ^
Hunter, Jr., Wilbur H. "Peale's Baltimore Museum." College Art Journal, Vol. 12, No. 1. (Autumn, 1952), pp. 31?36.
- ^
"EH.Net Encyclopedia: Manufactured and Natural Gas Industry"
. Archived from
the original
on January 2, 2008.
- ^
Miller, Lillian B. Rembrandt Peale: A Life in the Arts: 1778?1860. The Historical Society of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, 1985, p. 72
- ^
"Peale"
.
Pennsylvania Center for the Book
.
Archived
from the original on October 3, 2023.
- ^
Soltis, Carol Eaton. "Rembrandt Peale's
Rubens Peale with a Geranium
: A Possible Source in David Teniers the Younger".
American Art Journal
, Vol. 33, No. 1/2. (2002), pp. 4?19
- ^
Ward, David C. "Celebration of Self: The Portraiture of Charles Willson Peale and Rembrandt Peale, 1822?27.” American Art, Vol. 7, No. 1. (Winter, 1993), pp. 8?27.
- ^
Miller, Lillian B.
Rembrandt Peale: A Life in the Arts: 1778?1860
. The Historical Society of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, 1985, pp. 80?81
- ^
Chrysler Museum at Norfolk; Anderson, Dennis R (1976).
Three hundred years of American art in the Chrysler Museum: a selected exhibition from its permanent collection honoring the nation's bicentennial and the completion of the museum's new twenty gallery structure
. Norfolk, Va.: The Museum. p. 24.
OCLC
219774214
.
- ^
"Portrait of Thomas Jefferson"
. Archived from
the original
on February 9, 2012
. Retrieved
March 31,
2008
.
- ^
"John Marshall Portrait"
.
oyez.org
. Archived from
the original
on April 10, 2008.
- ^
"La Salle University : Art Museum"
.
www.lasalle.edu
. Archived from
the original
on September 1, 2006.
- ^
"Meschutt, David." “Rembrandt Peale's Portrait of Charles Mathews, British Comedian, Identified.” American Art Journal, Vol. 21, No. 3. (1989), pp. 74?79.
References
[
edit
]
- Hunter, Jr., Wilbur H. "Peale's Baltimore Museum." College Art Journal, Vol. 12, No. 1. (Autumn, 1952), pp. 31?36
- Mahey, John A. "The Studio of Rembrandt Peale." American Art Journal, Vol. 1, No. 2. (Autumn, 1969), pp. 20?40.
- Meschutt, David." "Rembrandt Peale's Portrait of Charles Mathews, British Comedian, Identified." American Art Journal, Vol. 21, No. 3. (1989), pp. 74?79.
- Miller, Lillian B.
Rembrandt Peale: A Life in the Arts: 1778?1860
. The Historical Society of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, 1985
- Soltis, Carol Eaton. "Rembrandt Peale's
Rubens Peale with a Geranium
: A Possible Source in David Teniers the Younger".
American Art Journal
, Vol. 33, No. 1/2. (2002), pp. 4?19
- Ward, David C.
Charles Willson Peale: Art and Selfhood in the Early Republic
Berkeley, California: University of California Press, 2004.
- Ward, David C. "Celebration of Self: The Portraiture of Charles Willson Peale and Rembrandt Peale, 1822?27." American Art, Vol. 7, No. 1. (Winter, 1993), pp. 8?27.
External links
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Paintings
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Founder
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Related
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Family
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International
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National
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Artists
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People
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Other
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