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This is a list of portraits of ], who was the seventh president of the United States. | This is a list of portraits of ], who was the seventh president of the United States. | ||
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'''Color key:''' {{nbsp}}{{nbsp}} Pre- and post-presidential portraits {{color box|white}} {{nbsp}}{{nbsp}} Presidential-era portraits {{color box|#87ceeb}} | ||
==Paintings== | ==Paintings== | ||
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|National Portrait Gallery | |National Portrait Gallery | ||
|Painted from life when Jackson was near death, painted a portrait of ] during the same sittings<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Hermitage, home of Old Hickory, by Stanley F. Horn |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015026798523&seq=266 |access-date=2025-01-05 |website=HathiTrust |language=en}}</ref> | |Painted from life when Jackson was near death, painted a portrait of ] during the same sittings<ref name=":5">{{Cite web |title=The Hermitage, home of Old Hickory, by Stanley F. Horn |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015026798523&seq=266 |access-date=2025-01-05 |website=HathiTrust |language=en}}</ref> | ||
|} | |} | ||
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|Dan Adams, enlarged by Charles Truscott<ref>{{Cite journal |date=2023-11-21 |title=Portrait of Andrew Jackson (1767-1845) |url=https://digitaltennessee.tnsos.gov/portraitphotography/2/ |journal=Tennesseans Through the Lens: Portrait Photography in Tennessee}}</ref> | |Dan Adams, enlarged by Charles Truscott<ref>{{Cite journal |date=2023-11-21 |title=Portrait of Andrew Jackson (1767-1845) |url=https://digitaltennessee.tnsos.gov/portraitphotography/2/ |journal=Tennesseans Through the Lens: Portrait Photography in Tennessee}}</ref> | ||
|Daguerreotype | |Daguerreotype | ||
|This version hand-tinted; per Remini this image captures Jackson "bloated, grumpy, formally attired, and propped up against a pillow"<ref name=":3" /> | |This version hand-tinted; per Remini this image captures Jackson "bloated, grumpy, formally attired, and propped up against a pillow";<ref name=":3" /> possibly apocryphal story about Jackson's comment on the image: "Humph! Looks like a monkey!"<ref name=":5" /> | ||
|} | |} | ||
Latest revision as of 19:46, 5 January 2025
Notable images of 7th U.S. presidentThis is a list of portraits of Andrew Jackson, who was the seventh president of the United States.
Color key: Pre- and post-presidential portraits Presidential-era portraits
Paintings
Image | Date | Age | Artist | Institution | Technique | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1815 | 48 | Nathan Wheeler | ? | Oil on canvas | There are no known images of Andrew Jackson before 1815, this was painted from life in 1815 after the battle of New Orleans | ||
1817 | 50 | Ralph Eleaser Whiteside Earl | National Portrait Gallery | ||||
1817 | 50 | Ralph Eleaser Whiteside Earl | |||||
1819 | 52 | Samuel Lovett Waldo | Metropolitan Museum of Art | Oil on canvas | |||
1819 | 52 | Samuel Lovett Waldo | Historic New Orleans Collection | Oil on canvas | |||
1819 | 52 | Addison Gallery of American Art, Phillips Andover Academy | Oil on canvas | According to biographer Robert V. Remini, Waldo produced one of the "better likenesses" of Jackson | |||
1819 | 52 | Charles Willson Peale | The Masonic Library and Museum of Pennsylvania of The Grand Lodge F. & A. M. of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia | Oil on canvas | |||
1819 | 52 | Rembrandt Peale | Maryland Historical Society | Oil on canvas | Commissioned by the city of Baltimore | ||
1819 | 52 | Anna Claypoole Peale | Yale University Art Gallery | Watercolor on ivory | Painted in Washington, D.C. while Jackson was there defending himself in Congress against charges of misconduct in the First Seminole War | ||
1819 | 52 | John Wesley Jarvis | Metropolitan Museum of Art | Oil on canvas | Commissioned by the city of New York; Remini considered this a "romantic portrait" | ||
c. 1822 | 55 | Possibly Matthew Harris Jouett | Oil on wood panel | ||||
1824 | 57 | Thomas Sully | Painted from life, "the original 1824 study was privately owned by Mrs. Breckenridge Long in 1940, but its current location is unknown." | ||||
1828 | 57 | Asher B. Durand | New York City Hall | Oil | "After John Vanderlyn," collection of New-York Historical Society, New York | ||
1828 | 61 | Joseph Wood | Original image lost (?) | ||||
1830 | 63 | Ralph Eleaser Whiteside Earl | DAR Museum | Oil on canvas | "The Jockey Club Portrait" Jackson is sitting in a chair ordered by James Monroe from Pierre-Antoine Bellange, in the distance is the U.S. Capitol with the "Bullfinch dome," which is distinct from the present dome. | ||
1830 | 63 | Ralph Eleaser Whiteside Earl | Private collection | "Farmer Jackson" portrait | |||
1828–1833 | 61–66 | Ralph Eleaser Whiteside Earl | Andrew Jackson's Hermitage, Nashville | "Tennessee gentleman" portrait | |||
1832 | 65 | Ralph Eleaser Whiteside Earl | North Carolina Museum of Art | ||||
1833 | 66 | Ralph Eleaser Whiteside Earl | Brooks Museum of Art, Memphis | ||||
1833 | 66 | Ralph Eleaser Whiteside Earl | Andrew Jackson's Hermitage, Nashville | Andrew Jackson Astride Sam Patch | |||
1832–35 | 65–68 | William James Hubard | |||||
1835 | 68 | Samuel M. Charles | "Miniature" | Per biographer Robert V. Remini, he was "refusing to wear his dentures" when he sat for this portrait | |||
1835 | 68 | David Rent Etter [d] | Second Bank Portrait Gallery, Independence National Park, Philadelphia | Depicts Jackson, seated at the White House, pointing a copy of the Proclamation to the People of South Carolina | |||
1835 | 68 | Ralph Eleaser Whiteside Earl | |||||
1835 | 68 | Ralph Eleaser Whiteside Earl | Andrew Jackson's Hermitage, Nashville | ||||
1836 | 69 | Ralph Eleaser Whiteside Earl | Columbia Museum of Art, Columbia, South Carolina | ||||
1836–37 | 69–70 | Ralph Eleaser Whiteside Earl | Smithsonian Museum of American Art | "The National Picture," possession transferred to museum from U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia | |||
1837 | 70 | Ralph Eleaser Whiteside Earl | |||||
1840 | 73 | Miner Kilbourne Kellogg | |||||
January 1840 | 73 | Jacques Amans | |||||
1840 | 73 | Edward Dalton Marchant | Union League of Philadelphia (?) | ||||
1840 | 73 | James Tooley Jr. | "After Marchant" | ||||
1840 | 73 | Trevor Thomas Fowler [d] | National Portrait Gallery | ||||
1847? 1865? | ? | George Peter Alexander Healy | National Portrait Gallery | Painted from life when Jackson was near death, painted a portrait of Sarah Yorke Jackson during the same sittings |
Photographs
Posthumous
Image | Date | Artist | Institution | Technique | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1845 | Thomas Sully | National Gallery of Art | |||
1845 | Thomas Sully | Corcoran Gallery of Art | |||
1857 | Thomas Sully | United States Senate Collection | Oil on canvas mounted on board | Based on a study from life done in 1824 |
Notable engravings and lithographs
Image | Date | Artist | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
? | James Barton Longacre | "After Sully" | |
? | James Barton Longacre | "After J. Wood" | |
? | James Barton Longacre | "After Earl, 1826" | |
September 28, 1829 | James Barton Longacre | "Drawn from life" | |
1845 | Currier & Ives | Lithograph, posthumous | |
U.S. Bureau of Engraving and Printing |
Miscellaneous
Image | Date | Artist | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1828 | William James Hubard | Cut-paper silhouette |
References
- ^ "Who's Who?". AMERICAN HERITAGE. Retrieved 2024-12-30.
- "Putting a Face on the Man (1815–1821) | The Historic New Orleans Collection". www.hnoc.org. Retrieved 2024-12-30.
- "Andrew Jackson". America's Presidents: National Portrait Gallery (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-12-30.
- ^ Remini (1977), illustration insert
- "Andrew Jackson by Rembrandt Peale (1819)". Baltimore City Life Collection, lent by Mayor and City Council of Baltimore. Maryland Center for History and Culture.
- "Andrew Jackson (1767–1845) | Yale University Art Gallery". artgallery.yale.edu. Retrieved 2024-12-30.
- Jarvis, John Wesley (1819), General Andrew Jackson, retrieved 2024-12-30
- ^ Remini, Robert Vincent (1984). Andrew Jackson and the course of American democracy, 1833-1845. Internet Archive. New York, N.Y. : Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-06-015279-6.
- ^ "Andrew Jackson" (PDF). govinfo.gov.
- "Andrew Jackson (1767–1845), (painting)". siris-artinventories.si.edu. Retrieved 2024-12-30.
- Stephens (2018), p. 188.
- ^ Stephens (2018), illustration insert.
- ^ "Collections Object Detail". Daughters of the American Revolution. Retrieved 2024-12-31.
- Remini, Robert Vincent (1984). Andrew Jackson and the course of American democracy, 1833-1845. Internet Archive. New York, N.Y. : Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-06-015279-6.
- Gobetz, Wally (2008-06-01), Philadelphia - Old City: Second Bank Portrait Gallery - Andrew Jackson, retrieved 2024-12-31
- ^ "The Hermitage, home of Old Hickory, by Stanley F. Horn". HathiTrust. Retrieved 2025-01-05.
- Smith, Margaret Denton (1979). "Checklist of Photographers Working in New Orleans, 1840–1865". Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association. 20 (4): 393–430. ISSN 0024-6816. JSTOR 4231938.
- "Daguerreotypes: Andrew Jackson". WHHA (en-US). Retrieved 2024-12-30.
- "Portrait of Andrew Jackson (1767-1845)". Tennesseans Through the Lens: Portrait Photography in Tennessee. 2023-11-21.
Sources
- "Senate Art" (PDF). govinfo.gov.
- Remini, Robert V. (1977). Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Empire, 1767–1821. New York: Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-8018-5912-0. LCCN 77003766. OCLC 1145801830.
- Stephens, Rachel (2018). Selling Andrew Jackson: Ralph E. W. Earl and the Politics of Portraiture. Columbia, South Carolina: University of South Carolina Press. ISBN 978-1-6111-7867-8. LCCN 2017041622. OCLC 1023818256. Project MUSE book 59054.