ArtworkStatus unknown

Cornelius Allerton

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oil paint (paint)69 × 83 Cm

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About the artwork
Artist supplied description.

As the wealth and population of western New England increased, individuals wished to record their success by preserving their own or their family members' likenesses for posterity. With this increased demand, talented sign painters such as Ammi Phillips saw new opportunities. Phillips taught himself to be a limner—a painter of portraits. By 1811 he had learned painting techniques from other Connecticut limners, who executed full-length, three-quarter, and bust portraits on canvas, wood, and glass. Phillips began to use conventional poses adopted from European prints and became one of the most successful portraitists of the middle and upper classes in rural New England, plying his trade in Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New York.

Here Phillips depicted Dr. Cornelius Allerton seated in a painted chair against a somber, gray background. Although the sitter's face is relatively unmodeled, the artist's careful rendering of detail captures a sense of his individuality. The inclusion of a volume of Parr's Medical Dictionary conveys Allerton's profession, while a tiny horse in the distance may suggest his financial status. Itinerant painters such as Phillips were often commissioned to portray several members of a family; in this case, Phillips also completed portraits of Allerton's mother (1946.395) and mother-in-law (Connecticut Historical Society, Hartford). This painting was given to the Art Institute by Robert Allerton, the sitter's great-nephew and an important benefactor of the museum.

Artwork metadata
Structured fields synced from connected systems.
Mediumoil paint (paint)
Dimensions69 × 83 Cm
Tags
fashionpeopleportraits
CertificateCertificate not provided
Timeline
Chain of custody, exhibitions, and verification milestones synced from the provenance service.
Fri
06
Feb
note

<em>Paintings at the Art Institute of Chicago: Highlights of the Collection</em>,

Paintings at the Art Institute of Chicago: Highlights of the Collection, (Chicago: Art Institute of Chicago/Yale University Press, 2017), 45.
Fri
06
Feb
note

Judith A. Barter and Monica Obniski, <em>For Kith and Kin: The Folk Art Collection at the Art Institute of Chicago</em>,

Judith A. Barter and Monica Obniski, For Kith and Kin: The Folk Art Collection at the Art Institute of Chicago, (Chicago: Art Institute of Chicago/Yale University Press, 2012), no. 11.
Fri
06
Feb
exhibition

Art Institute of Chicago, <a href="https://www.artic.edu/exhibitions/4071/two-centuries-of-american-art-1750-1950"><em>Two Centuries of American Art, 1750-1950</em></a>, Oct. 1, 1959–Jan. 10, 1960...

Art Institute of Chicago, Two Centuries of American Art, 1750-1950, Oct. 1, 1959–Jan. 10, 1960, no cat. [downloadable checklist available].
Fri
06
Feb
note

Judith A. Barter, et al., <em>American Arts at The Art Institute of Chicago: From Colonial Times to World War I</em>

Judith A. Barter, et al., American Arts at The Art Institute of Chicago: From Colonial Times to World War I (Chicago: Art Institute of Chicago, 1998), 161–164, no. 71.
Fri
06
Feb
note

Leigh Rehner Jones and Shirley A. Mearns, "Ammi Phillip's Portraits with Animals," <em>Hudson Valley Regional Review</em> 4, 2,

Leigh Rehner Jones and Shirley A. Mearns, "Ammi Phillip's Portraits with Animals," Hudson Valley Regional Review 4, 2, (Sept. 1987), 63 (ill.).
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