Francis Bicknell Carpenter: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|American painter (1830–1900)}} |
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{{other people|Francis Carpenter}} |
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{{Infobox artist |
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Image:Emancipation_proclamation.jpg|thumb|400px|Lincoln met with his cabinet on July 22, 1862 for the first reading of a draft of the Emancipation Proclamation. Use a cursor to identify who is in the picture. Oil on canvas, 1864. Sight measurement. Height: 108 inches (274.32 cm) Width: 180 inches (457.2 cm) |
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| name = Francis Bicknell Carpenter |
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| image = Francis Bicknell Carpenter.jpg |
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| image_size = 180px |
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| caption = Francis Bicknell Carpenter Daguerreotype |
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| birth_name = |
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| birth_date = {{birth date |1830|08|06|}} |
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| birth_place = [[Homer (town), New York|Homer]], [[Cortland County, New York]] |
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| death_date = {{death date and age |1900|05|23|1830|08|06|}} |
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| death_place = |
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| nationality = American |
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| known_for = Painting |
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| training = [[Sanford Thayer]] |
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| movement = |
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| notable_works = 1852 to 1896 Presidential portraits & other notables |
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| patrons = |
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'''Francis Bicknell Carpenter''' (August 6, 1830 – May 23, 1900) was an American painter born in [[Homer (town), New York|Homer, New York]]. Carpenter is best known for his painting ''[[First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln]]'', which is hanging in the [[United States Capitol]]. Carpenter resided with [[Abraham Lincoln|President Lincoln]] at the [[White House]] and in 1866 published his one-volume memoir '' Six Months at the White House with Abraham Lincoln''.<ref name=senate>[https://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/art/artifact/Painting_33_00005.htme U.S. Senate Art & History site] retrieved 2008</ref> Carpenter was a descendant of the New England [[Rehoboth Carpenter family]].<ref name=Memorial>''A Genealogical History of the Rehoboth Branch of the Carpenter Family in America''. Also known as the ''Carpenter Memorial''. Author: Amos Bugbee Carpenter (1818–1904). Published 1898 By: Press of Carpenter & Morehouse, Amherst, MA. His family is listed on page 460 (# 664). His Carpenter ancestors come from Rehoboth, MA and his immigrant ancestor was William Carpenter (born 1605 England – died February 7, 1658/1659 MA).</ref> |
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==Family== |
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poly 5 190 24 172 26 155 35 140 49 140 56 144 59 162 64 181 76 204 118 251 144 272 150 312 144 333 118 339 96 307 66 296 50 240 14 232 [[Edwin M. Stanton|Edwin Stanton (Secretary of War)]] |
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Carpenter was born to Asaph Harmon<ref>[http://www.rootsweb.com/~nycortla/biblerec/bible2.htm Asaph Harmon in the Carpenter Memorial but Asaph Hammam in the family bible record]</ref> and Almira Clark (1801–1885). He was one of nine children.<ref name=Memorial/> |
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poly 77 188 75 145 71 97 96 81 96 74 93 68 99 48 115 43 124 52 124 61 119 80 124 85 124 91 134 98 154 129 153 138 139 156 139 164 151 207 137 262 80 207 [[Salmon P. Chase|Salmon Chase (Secretary of the Treasury)]] |
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poly 151 238 154 205 158 165 183 152 190 145 191 135 183 135 183 117 194 104 209 104 223 113 220 122 213 130 220 147 220 155 236 168 257 197 281 213 289 221 283 223 283 231 277 228 273 224 250 224 241 247 283 255 288 266 260 349 219 349 219 278 [[Abraham Lincoln|Abraham Lincoln (President of the United States)]] |
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poly 281 210 300 176 322 164 319 146 319 126 336 122 345 124 352 136 353 161 376 173 386 202 358 203 346 215 [[Gideon Welles|Gideon Welles (Secretary of the Navy)]] |
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poly 283 315 307 315 340 251 381 251 389 226 337 226 361 204 398 203 428 167 427 154 424 154 424 145 429 137 429 131 443 127 454 136 454 153 454 168 466 200 468 217 435 313 398 322 382 286 371 286 362 349 311 359 309 355 324 340 325 325 285 326 [[William H. Seward|William Seward (Secretary of State)]] |
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poly 382 132 407 116 401 108 401 88 410 79 421 81 426 90 430 115 439 123 440 141 414 208 373 210 370 170 [[Caleb Blood Smith|Caleb B. Smith (Secretary of the Interior)]] |
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poly 439 120 450 105 448 96 445 80 445 69 452 65 463 65 472 71 475 81 475 93 481 105 498 120 502 162 499 206 490 210 457 204 438 135 [[Montgomery Blair|Montgomery Blair (Postmaster General)]] |
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poly 501 207 501 193 531 169 531 162 528 145 528 134 541 122 559 135 563 146 562 158 574 167 578 188 578 198 593 226 580 218 558 218 553 223 [[Edward Bates|Edward Bates (Attorney General)]] |
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poly 251 223 240 248 286 253 293 238 300 244 338 234 325 217 296 222 282 222 282 232 278 233 273 223 [[Emancipation Proclamation|Emancipation Proclamation draft]] |
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poly 317 2 318 65 380 65 379 0 [[#Victuallers|Unknown Painting]] |
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rect 1 1 608 367 [[Francis Bicknell Carpenter|use cursor to explore or button to enlarge]] |
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On January 6, 1853, Francis married Augusta Herrick Prentiss (1831–1926). Francis and Augusta had the following children: |
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desc none |
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</imagemap> |
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* [[Florence Carpenter Ives|Florence Trumbell Carpenter]] was born on March 10, 1854, in Homer, Cortland County, NY. She died on December 30, 1899. She is number 6550 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 645. Florence married Albert Chester Ives on May 12, 1877, in New York. Albert was born about 1854 in Buffalo, NY.<ref name=Memorial/> |
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'''Francis Bicknell Carpenter''' ([[August 6]], [[1830]]–[[May 23]], [[1900]]) was an American [[Painting|painter]] born in [[Homer, New York]]. Carpenter is best known for his painting ''First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln'', which is hanging in the [[United States Capitol]]. Carpenter resided with President Lincoln at the White House and in 1866 published his one volume memoir '' Six Months at the White House with Abraham Lincoln''.<ref name=senate>[http://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/art/artifact/Painting_33_00005.htm U.S. Senate Art & History site] retrieved 2008</ref> Carpenter was a descendant of the New England [[Rehoboth Carpenter Family]]. |
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* Herbert Sanford Carpenter was born on May 22, 1862, in Homer, Cortland, NY. He is number 6551 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 645. Family on page 654 (# 1478). Herbert married Cora Anderson on February 13, 1894, in NY.<ref name=Memorial/> Cora was born in Louisville, KY in 1863. She was active in the [[Women's suffrage in the United States|women's suffrage movement]], marching in NYC suffrage demonstrations as a flagbearer from 1913 to 1917.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Scherer|first=Carlin|date=March 13, 1971|title="Lady—and Patriot" [letter to editor]|work=Boston Globe|url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/435482704/|access-date=July 10, 2020}}</ref> Herbert died in 1926; Cora lived until 1960.<ref>{{Cite news|last=|first=|date=October 5, 1960|title=Mrs. H.S. Carpenter|work=The New York Times|url=https://nyti.ms/38MDseY|access-date=July 10, 2020}}</ref> |
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== |
==Education== |
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In 1844, after showing his father a painting of his mother that the former viewed as a success, Carpenter was allowed to go to [[Syracuse, New York]], for six months to study under Sanford Thayer. In 1848, at age 18, he was awarded a purchase prize by the [[American Art-Union]]. By the age of twenty-one, Carpenter established a studio in New York City.<ref name="ReferenceA">''A Genealogical History of the Rehoboth Branch of the Carpenter Family in America''. Also known as the ''Carpenter Memorial''</ref> Carpenter was elected to the [[National Academy of Design]] as an associate member in 1852. |
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Carpenter was born in the town of Homer, New York to Asaph and Almira Carpenter. Asaph Carpenter was a farmer. The family farm was located between the village of Homer and the hamlet of Little York, on what is now [[US Route 11]]. Francis Carpenter exhibited signs of artistic leanings at an early age; “from the age of eight he drew on every available surface, once chalking a scene of the capture of Major [[John Andre]] on the side of the family barn”. Carpenter also lettered and painted signs for local businesses. Carpenter’s father was not initially enthusiastic about his son’s artistic pursuits, at one point calling them “nonsense”; he apprenticed his son, unsuccessfully, to a grocer at the age of thirteen. |
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==Education== |
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Two years later—after showing his father a painting of his mother that the former viewed as a success—Carpenter was allowed to go to [[Syracuse, New York]] to study under [[Sanford Thayer]]. In 1848, at age 18, he was awarded a purchase prize by the American Art-Union. By the age of twenty-one, Carpenter established a studio in New York City. |
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==Early career== |
==Early career== |
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In 1852, Carpenter was commissioned to paint a portrait of President [[Millard Fillmore]], a fellow upstate New Yorker born in [[Cayuga County]]. Commissions followed for portraits of Presidents [[Franklin Pierce]] and [[John Tyler]], and other mid-19th century notables, including the clergyman [[Henry Ward Beecher]]; newspaper editor [[Horace Greeley]]; [[Ezra Cornell]], founder of Cornell University; [[James Russell Lowell]], poet; and [[John C. |
In 1852, Carpenter was commissioned to paint a portrait of President [[Millard Fillmore]], a fellow upstate New Yorker born in [[Cayuga County]]. Commissions followed for portraits of Presidents [[Franklin Pierce]] and [[John Tyler]], and other mid-19th century notables, including the clergyman [[Henry Ward Beecher]]; newspaper editor [[Horace Greeley]]; [[Ezra Cornell]], founder of [[Cornell University]]; [[James Russell Lowell]], poet; and [[John C. Frémont]], the first Republican presidential candidate.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> |
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==''First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln''== |
==''First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln''== |
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{{main|First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln}} |
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According to his memoir, ''Six Months at the White House'', Carpenter was deeply moved by [[Abraham Lincoln]]’s [[Emancipation Proclamation]], calling it “an act unparalleled for moral grandeur in the history of mankind”, and Carpenter felt "an intense desire to do something expressive of...the great moral issue involved in the war." Carpenter, having formulated his idea for the subject of the painting and outlined its composition, fortuitously met Frederick A. Lane, a friend who recently had earned a large amount of money. Bankrolled by Lane, and through the influence of Samuel Sinclair of the ''New York Tribune'' and Congressman Schuyler Colfax of Indiana, Carpenter gained Lincoln’s assent to travel to Washington and work with him on the painting. Carpenter met with the President on February 6, 1864, and began work. |
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{{Emancipation Proclamation draft}} |
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According to his memoir, ''Six Months at the White House with Abraham Lincoln'',<ref name="Memoir">''Six Months at the White House with Abraham Lincoln: The Story of a Picture'', New York: Hurd and Houghton (1866); also published as ''The Inner Life of Abraham Lincoln: Six Months at the White House'', New York: Hurd and Houghton (1867).</ref><ref>According to Harold Holzer, "''The Inner Life of Abraham Lincoln'' ... was actually nothing more than a presumptuously re-titled edition of ''Six Months at the White House'' (its text unchanged)." [https://www.friendsofthelincolncollection.org/lincoln-lore/lincoln-through-the-eyes-of-history/ "Lincoln Through the Eyes of History," ''Lincoln Lore'']</ref> Carpenter was deeply moved by [[Abraham Lincoln]]'s [[Emancipation Proclamation]], calling it "an act unparalleled for moral grandeur in the history of mankind."<ref>Carpenter, pp. 10-11.</ref> Carpenter felt "an intense desire to do something expressive of appreciation of the great issues involved in the war."<ref>Carpenter, p. 12.</ref> Carpenter, having formulated his idea for the subject of the painting and outlined its composition, fortuitously met Frederick A. Lane, a friend who recently had earned a large amount of money. Bankrolled by Lane, and through the influence of Samuel Sinclair of the ''[[New York Tribune]]'' and Representative [[Schuyler Colfax]] of Indiana, Carpenter gained Lincoln's assent to travel to Washington and work with him on the painting. Carpenter met with the President on February 6, 1864, and then began work. |
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Carpenter began with many sketches of Cabinet members and of Lincoln himself, working from life, as Lincoln worked, and from photographs taken by [[ |
Carpenter began with many sketches of Cabinet members and of Lincoln himself, working from life, as Lincoln worked, and from photographs taken by [[Mathew Brady]] of Lincoln and members of his Cabinet. Carpenter was given free access to Lincoln's White House office for the former purpose, and the [[State Dining Room]] was given him for a studio.<ref name=senate/> On July 12, 1864, Lincoln led his cabinet into the State Dining Room to view the completed work.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> |
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When Lincoln had the painting exhibited to the public in the [[East Room (White House)|East Room]] of the White House, Carpenter noted that the exhibition was thronged with visitors. Carpenter campaigned for Congress to purchase the painting, enlisting the help of fellow Homer native [[William Stoddard|William O. Stoddard]], Lincoln's private secretary. Congress did not appropriate the money. The painting remained in Carpenter's possession until 1877, when he arranged for Elizabeth Thompson to purchase it for $25,000 and donate it to Congress. A joint session of Congress was held in 1878, on Lincoln's birthday, to serve as a reception for the painting, with the artist present.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> |
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===Exhibition of ''First Reading'' and reception=== |
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When Lincoln had the painting exhibited to the public in the East Room of the White House, Carpenter noted that the exhibition was thronged with visitors. An engraving of the painting was made by [[Alexander Hay Ritchie]] for mass reproduction. The painting was well received by critics, according to newspaper advertisements for those reproductions; also, many of the subjects in the painting commented favorably. The painting itself then toured the country. |
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===Purchase and donation to Congress=== |
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Carpenter campaigned for Congress to purchase the painting, enlisting the help of fellow Homer native William O. Stoddard, Lincoln's private secretary. Congress did not appropriate the money. The painting remained in Carpenter’s possession until 1877, when he arranged for Elizabeth Thompson to purchase it for $25,000 and donate it to Congress. A joint session of Congress was held in 1878, on Lincoln’s birthday, to serve as a reception for the painting. The artist was present at this event. |
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==Later career and death== |
==Later career and death== |
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Carpenter created an array of artwork depicting Lincoln and his family. In the wake of Lincoln's assassination, Carpenter published a book in 1866 titled ''Six Months at The White House with Abraham Lincoln''. The book details Carpenter's time living in the White House, as well as his personal relationship with Lincoln and other politicians such as [[William Seward]], [[Edwin Stanton]] and [[Ulysses S. Grant]].<ref name="Memoir"/> |
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Following Lincoln's assassination, Carpenter produced many portraits of the President and his family; some based on memory, others on photographs provided by Lincoln’s widow. Carpenter’s skills were in decline by this time. One admirer of Carpenter’s early work wondered if a later portrait of Lincoln was a forgery. |
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Among the notable portraits painted by Carpenter, aside from Lincoln, were those of President Fillmore and Governor [[Myron H. Clarke]], painted in the New York City Hall; [[Horace Greeley]] (a portrait owned by the Tribune Association); [[Asa Packer]], founder of [[Lehigh University]]; James Russell Lowell; New York banker [[David Leavitt]]; Dr. [[Lyman Beecher]]; [[Henry Ward Beecher]] and others.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5XAYAAAAYAAJ&q=%22david+leavitt%22+bethlehem&pg=PA120 |title=Artists of the Nineteenth Century and Their Works, Vol. I, Clara Erskine Clement Waters, Laurence Hutton, Houghton, Osgood & Company, Boston, 1879 |date=2008-04-07 |accessdate=2011-05-29|last1=Waters |first1=Clara Erskine Clement |last2=Hutton |first2=Laurence }}</ref> |
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By the late 1870s, Carpenter became increasingly interested in religion and spirituality; art historian Mary Bartlett Cowdrey believed “that religious obsession somehow undermined Carpenter’s work”. Carpenter died in New York City—a brief obituary appearing in the ''New York Times'' misstated the title of his most famous work. His body was returned to Homer, and he was buried in Greenwood Cemetery in that village. |
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By the late 1870s, Carpenter became increasingly interested in religion and spirituality; art historian Mary Bartlett Cowdrey believed "that religious obsession somehow undermined Carpenter's work". Carpenter died in New York City—a brief obituary appearing in ''The New York Times'' misstated the title of his most famous work.<ref name=Memorial/> |
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==Criticism and later exhibitions of Carpenter’s work== |
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Carpenter’s legacy has been decidedly mixed, according to a retrospective of Carpenter’s career written for the ''American Art Journal''. Cowdrey attempted a full-scale biography that might have helped his reputation, but became frustrated by lack of interest on the part of Carpenter’s family. Contemporary critic Henry T. Tuckerman acknowledged Carpenter’s “facility in capturing a likeness” but “criticized the artist’s lack of ‘grace’ and ‘vitality’”. The United States Senate ''Catalogue of Fine Art'' observes that ''First Reading'', as it hangs today in the Capitol, contains a much weaker portrait of Lincoln than the engraving made from it. This is due to Carpenter’s obsessive tinkering with the original painting while he had it in his possession. |
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Carpenter died of "dropsy" an old-fashioned term for [[edema]]<ref>See: ''Dictionary of American Biography'', Vol. 2, by A. Johnson, page 510. Copyright 1995 by Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc. [https://web.archive.org/web/19991103094537/http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/4035/fbc.htm See also:]</ref> on May 23, 1900, in New York and was buried in Glenwood Cemetery, Homer, Cortland County, New York.<ref name=Memorial/> |
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In 2006, an exhibition of portraits by Carpenter was shown at the Center for the Arts[http://www.center4art.org/] in Homer, New York. Portraits by Carpenter of several figures of local historical interest were exhibited. Loans of the works were obtained from community members, the Phillips Free Library[http://library.public-libraries.org/NewYork/Homer/PhillipsFreeLibrary.html] in Homer, and the Homer Central School District[http://www.homercentral.org/]. |
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==Criticism and later exhibitions of Carpenter's work== |
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Carpenter's legacy has been decidedly mixed, according to a retrospective of Carpenter's career written for the ''American Art Journal''. Cowdrey attempted a full-scale biography that might have helped his reputation, but became frustrated by lack of interest on the part of Carpenter's family. Contemporary critic Henry T. Tuckerman acknowledged Carpenter's "facility in capturing a likeness" but "criticized the artist's lack of 'grace' and 'vitality'". The United States Senate ''Catalogue of Fine Art'' observes that ''First Reading'', as it hangs today in the Capitol, contains a much weaker portrait of Lincoln than the engraving made from it. This is due to Carpenter's obsessive tinkering with the original painting while he had it in his possession. |
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In 2006, an exhibition of portraits by Carpenter was shown at the Center for the Arts<ref>[http://www.center4art.org/ Center for the Arts]</ref> in Homer, New York. Portraits by Carpenter of several figures of local historical interest were exhibited. Loans of the works were obtained from community members, the Phillips Free Library<ref>{{cite web|url=http://library.public-libraries.org/NewYork/Homer/PhillipsFreeLibrary.html |title=Phillips Free Library - Homer, New York |publisher=Library.public-libraries.org |date= |accessdate=2011-05-29}}</ref> in Homer, and the [[Homer Central Schools|Homer Central School District]]. |
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==Portrait of Mary Lincoln== |
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[[File:Mary Todd Lincoln2crop.jpg|thumb|right|First Lady Mary Todd Lincoln, photographed by [[Mathew Brady]]. Compare to the forged portrait [https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2012/02/10/arts/design/20120212-lincoln-slider.html?ref=design here.] ]] |
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On February 12, 1929, ''[[The New York Times]]'' reported the discovery of a new painting of [[Mary Todd Lincoln|Mary Lincoln]]. It reported that this painting was by Francis Bicknell Carpenter. This painting was reproduced in different biographies and books such as ''Mary Lincoln: Wife and Widow'' by [[Carl Sandburg]], printed in 1932. |
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The owner, Ludwig Pflum (aka [[Lew Bloom]]), sold it through the Milch Galleries in New York. It was acquired by Jessie Harlan Lincoln, the President's and Mary Lincoln's granddaughter. There is no record of what the painting sold for.<ref name="bauman">Bauman, Barry. (2012) Case Study: ''The Demise of Mary Lincoln: An Artistic Conspiracy.'' [http://baumanconservation.com/TheDemiseofMaryLincolnfs.html.] Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum Collection file LR 938.</ref> Pflum, a former vaudeville performer who dabbled in painting on the side, as Lew Bloom, claimed the painting of Mary Lincoln had not yet been presented and done in secret at the bequest of Mrs. Lincoln by the painter Francis Carpenter. After the assassination of [[Abraham Lincoln|President Lincoln]], Bloom claimed Mrs. Lincoln refused it and the painting was sold to a Philadelphia shipbuilder, Jacob G. Neafi. Bloom also claimed that after the death of Mrs. Neafie, Mr. Neafie gave the painting to Susan Bloom for her kindness and caring for Mrs. Neafie through her long illness.<ref name="bauman"/> Bloom went on to claim that he inherited the painting from his sister after her death in 1910. As it turns out, Susan Bloom was five years old when Mrs. Neafie died in 1860.<ref name="bauman"/> |
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This painting remained in the Lincoln family until 1976, later estimated at a value of about $400,000 US dollars, when it was given to the Illinois State Historical Library, now named the [[Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum]]. During a 2011 restoration by art conservator Barry Bauman, it was found to be a forgery.<ref name="bauman"/> The forgery overpainted an original oil portrait of an unknown woman, painted circa the 1860s, that was modified by painting out a crucifix, adding an Abraham Lincoln brooch with other adjustments such as forging Francis Bicknell Carpenter's signature.<ref name="bauman"/> Bauman is quoted to say, "Not only is it not Mary Lincoln, it's not Francis Carpenter."<ref name="bauman"/><ref name=Cohen>This quote is drawn from Barry Bauman's Case Study: ''The Demise of Mary Lincoln: An Artistic Conspiracy.'' |
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{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/12/arts/design/portrait-of-mary-todd-lincoln-is-deemed-a-hoax.html |
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|title=Mrs. Lincoln, I Presume? Well, as It Turns Out ... |
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|author=Cohen, Patricia |
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|work=The New York Times at NYTimes.com |
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|date=2012-02-11 |
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|accessdate=2012-02-14}} See portrait [https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2012/02/10/arts/design/20120212-lincoln-slider.html?ref=design here.]</ref> |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{reflist}} |
{{reflist}} |
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==External links== |
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[[Category:American painters|Carpenter, Francis Bicknell]] |
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* {{Internet Archive author |sname=Francis Bicknell Carpenter}} |
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* {{Librivox author |id=17494}} |
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[[Category:Portrait artists|Carpenter, Francis Bicknell]] |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20080907230718/http://www.picturehistory.com/product/id/4759 Picture History: Francis Bicknell Carpenter] contains a picture of him |
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[[Category:Rehoboth Carpenters]] |
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* ''[https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/73522 The inner life of Abraham Lincoln]'' at [[Project Gutenberg]] |
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{{Authority control}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Carpenter, Francis Bicknell}} |
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[[Category:19th-century American painters]] |
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[[Category:American male painters]] |
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[[Category:People from Homer, New York]] |
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[[Category:American portrait painters]] |
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[[Category:Rehoboth Carpenter family]] |
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[[Category:1830 births]] |
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[[Category:1900 deaths]] |
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[[Category:Deaths from edema]] |
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[[Category:19th-century American male artists]] |
Latest revision as of 21:50, 8 November 2024
Francis Bicknell Carpenter | |
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Born | |
Died | May 23, 1900 | (aged 69)
Nationality | American |
Education | Sanford Thayer |
Known for | Painting |
Notable work | 1852 to 1896 Presidential portraits & other notables |
Francis Bicknell Carpenter (August 6, 1830 – May 23, 1900) was an American painter born in Homer, New York. Carpenter is best known for his painting First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln, which is hanging in the United States Capitol. Carpenter resided with President Lincoln at the White House and in 1866 published his one-volume memoir Six Months at the White House with Abraham Lincoln.[1] Carpenter was a descendant of the New England Rehoboth Carpenter family.[2]
Family
[edit]Carpenter was born to Asaph Harmon[3] and Almira Clark (1801–1885). He was one of nine children.[2]
On January 6, 1853, Francis married Augusta Herrick Prentiss (1831–1926). Francis and Augusta had the following children:
- Florence Trumbell Carpenter was born on March 10, 1854, in Homer, Cortland County, NY. She died on December 30, 1899. She is number 6550 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 645. Florence married Albert Chester Ives on May 12, 1877, in New York. Albert was born about 1854 in Buffalo, NY.[2]
- Herbert Sanford Carpenter was born on May 22, 1862, in Homer, Cortland, NY. He is number 6551 in the Carpenter Memorial on page 645. Family on page 654 (# 1478). Herbert married Cora Anderson on February 13, 1894, in NY.[2] Cora was born in Louisville, KY in 1863. She was active in the women's suffrage movement, marching in NYC suffrage demonstrations as a flagbearer from 1913 to 1917.[4] Herbert died in 1926; Cora lived until 1960.[5]
Education
[edit]In 1844, after showing his father a painting of his mother that the former viewed as a success, Carpenter was allowed to go to Syracuse, New York, for six months to study under Sanford Thayer. In 1848, at age 18, he was awarded a purchase prize by the American Art-Union. By the age of twenty-one, Carpenter established a studio in New York City.[6] Carpenter was elected to the National Academy of Design as an associate member in 1852.
Early career
[edit]In 1852, Carpenter was commissioned to paint a portrait of President Millard Fillmore, a fellow upstate New Yorker born in Cayuga County. Commissions followed for portraits of Presidents Franklin Pierce and John Tyler, and other mid-19th century notables, including the clergyman Henry Ward Beecher; newspaper editor Horace Greeley; Ezra Cornell, founder of Cornell University; James Russell Lowell, poet; and John C. Frémont, the first Republican presidential candidate.[6]
First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln
[edit]According to his memoir, Six Months at the White House with Abraham Lincoln,[8][9] Carpenter was deeply moved by Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation, calling it "an act unparalleled for moral grandeur in the history of mankind."[10] Carpenter felt "an intense desire to do something expressive of appreciation of the great issues involved in the war."[11] Carpenter, having formulated his idea for the subject of the painting and outlined its composition, fortuitously met Frederick A. Lane, a friend who recently had earned a large amount of money. Bankrolled by Lane, and through the influence of Samuel Sinclair of the New York Tribune and Representative Schuyler Colfax of Indiana, Carpenter gained Lincoln's assent to travel to Washington and work with him on the painting. Carpenter met with the President on February 6, 1864, and then began work.
Carpenter began with many sketches of Cabinet members and of Lincoln himself, working from life, as Lincoln worked, and from photographs taken by Mathew Brady of Lincoln and members of his Cabinet. Carpenter was given free access to Lincoln's White House office for the former purpose, and the State Dining Room was given him for a studio.[1] On July 12, 1864, Lincoln led his cabinet into the State Dining Room to view the completed work.[6]
When Lincoln had the painting exhibited to the public in the East Room of the White House, Carpenter noted that the exhibition was thronged with visitors. Carpenter campaigned for Congress to purchase the painting, enlisting the help of fellow Homer native William O. Stoddard, Lincoln's private secretary. Congress did not appropriate the money. The painting remained in Carpenter's possession until 1877, when he arranged for Elizabeth Thompson to purchase it for $25,000 and donate it to Congress. A joint session of Congress was held in 1878, on Lincoln's birthday, to serve as a reception for the painting, with the artist present.[6]
Later career and death
[edit]Carpenter created an array of artwork depicting Lincoln and his family. In the wake of Lincoln's assassination, Carpenter published a book in 1866 titled Six Months at The White House with Abraham Lincoln. The book details Carpenter's time living in the White House, as well as his personal relationship with Lincoln and other politicians such as William Seward, Edwin Stanton and Ulysses S. Grant.[8]
Among the notable portraits painted by Carpenter, aside from Lincoln, were those of President Fillmore and Governor Myron H. Clarke, painted in the New York City Hall; Horace Greeley (a portrait owned by the Tribune Association); Asa Packer, founder of Lehigh University; James Russell Lowell; New York banker David Leavitt; Dr. Lyman Beecher; Henry Ward Beecher and others.[12]
By the late 1870s, Carpenter became increasingly interested in religion and spirituality; art historian Mary Bartlett Cowdrey believed "that religious obsession somehow undermined Carpenter's work". Carpenter died in New York City—a brief obituary appearing in The New York Times misstated the title of his most famous work.[2]
Carpenter died of "dropsy" an old-fashioned term for edema[13] on May 23, 1900, in New York and was buried in Glenwood Cemetery, Homer, Cortland County, New York.[2]
Criticism and later exhibitions of Carpenter's work
[edit]Carpenter's legacy has been decidedly mixed, according to a retrospective of Carpenter's career written for the American Art Journal. Cowdrey attempted a full-scale biography that might have helped his reputation, but became frustrated by lack of interest on the part of Carpenter's family. Contemporary critic Henry T. Tuckerman acknowledged Carpenter's "facility in capturing a likeness" but "criticized the artist's lack of 'grace' and 'vitality'". The United States Senate Catalogue of Fine Art observes that First Reading, as it hangs today in the Capitol, contains a much weaker portrait of Lincoln than the engraving made from it. This is due to Carpenter's obsessive tinkering with the original painting while he had it in his possession.
In 2006, an exhibition of portraits by Carpenter was shown at the Center for the Arts[14] in Homer, New York. Portraits by Carpenter of several figures of local historical interest were exhibited. Loans of the works were obtained from community members, the Phillips Free Library[15] in Homer, and the Homer Central School District.
Portrait of Mary Lincoln
[edit]On February 12, 1929, The New York Times reported the discovery of a new painting of Mary Lincoln. It reported that this painting was by Francis Bicknell Carpenter. This painting was reproduced in different biographies and books such as Mary Lincoln: Wife and Widow by Carl Sandburg, printed in 1932.
The owner, Ludwig Pflum (aka Lew Bloom), sold it through the Milch Galleries in New York. It was acquired by Jessie Harlan Lincoln, the President's and Mary Lincoln's granddaughter. There is no record of what the painting sold for.[16] Pflum, a former vaudeville performer who dabbled in painting on the side, as Lew Bloom, claimed the painting of Mary Lincoln had not yet been presented and done in secret at the bequest of Mrs. Lincoln by the painter Francis Carpenter. After the assassination of President Lincoln, Bloom claimed Mrs. Lincoln refused it and the painting was sold to a Philadelphia shipbuilder, Jacob G. Neafi. Bloom also claimed that after the death of Mrs. Neafie, Mr. Neafie gave the painting to Susan Bloom for her kindness and caring for Mrs. Neafie through her long illness.[16] Bloom went on to claim that he inherited the painting from his sister after her death in 1910. As it turns out, Susan Bloom was five years old when Mrs. Neafie died in 1860.[16]
This painting remained in the Lincoln family until 1976, later estimated at a value of about $400,000 US dollars, when it was given to the Illinois State Historical Library, now named the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum. During a 2011 restoration by art conservator Barry Bauman, it was found to be a forgery.[16] The forgery overpainted an original oil portrait of an unknown woman, painted circa the 1860s, that was modified by painting out a crucifix, adding an Abraham Lincoln brooch with other adjustments such as forging Francis Bicknell Carpenter's signature.[16] Bauman is quoted to say, "Not only is it not Mary Lincoln, it's not Francis Carpenter."[16][17]
References
[edit]- ^ a b U.S. Senate Art & History site retrieved 2008
- ^ a b c d e f A Genealogical History of the Rehoboth Branch of the Carpenter Family in America. Also known as the Carpenter Memorial. Author: Amos Bugbee Carpenter (1818–1904). Published 1898 By: Press of Carpenter & Morehouse, Amherst, MA. His family is listed on page 460 (# 664). His Carpenter ancestors come from Rehoboth, MA and his immigrant ancestor was William Carpenter (born 1605 England – died February 7, 1658/1659 MA).
- ^ Asaph Harmon in the Carpenter Memorial but Asaph Hammam in the family bible record
- ^ Scherer, Carlin (March 13, 1971). ""Lady—and Patriot" [letter to editor]". Boston Globe. Retrieved July 10, 2020.
- ^ "Mrs. H.S. Carpenter". The New York Times. October 5, 1960. Retrieved July 10, 2020.
- ^ a b c d A Genealogical History of the Rehoboth Branch of the Carpenter Family in America. Also known as the Carpenter Memorial
- ^ "Art & History: First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation by President Lincoln". U.S. Senate. Retrieved August 2, 2013. Lincoln met with his cabinet on July 22, 1862, for the first reading of a draft of the Emancipation Proclamation.
- ^ a b Six Months at the White House with Abraham Lincoln: The Story of a Picture, New York: Hurd and Houghton (1866); also published as The Inner Life of Abraham Lincoln: Six Months at the White House, New York: Hurd and Houghton (1867).
- ^ According to Harold Holzer, "The Inner Life of Abraham Lincoln ... was actually nothing more than a presumptuously re-titled edition of Six Months at the White House (its text unchanged)." "Lincoln Through the Eyes of History," Lincoln Lore
- ^ Carpenter, pp. 10-11.
- ^ Carpenter, p. 12.
- ^ Waters, Clara Erskine Clement; Hutton, Laurence (2008-04-07). Artists of the Nineteenth Century and Their Works, Vol. I, Clara Erskine Clement Waters, Laurence Hutton, Houghton, Osgood & Company, Boston, 1879. Retrieved 2011-05-29.
- ^ See: Dictionary of American Biography, Vol. 2, by A. Johnson, page 510. Copyright 1995 by Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc. See also:
- ^ Center for the Arts
- ^ "Phillips Free Library - Homer, New York". Library.public-libraries.org. Retrieved 2011-05-29.
- ^ a b c d e f Bauman, Barry. (2012) Case Study: The Demise of Mary Lincoln: An Artistic Conspiracy. [1] Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum Collection file LR 938.
- ^ This quote is drawn from Barry Bauman's Case Study: The Demise of Mary Lincoln: An Artistic Conspiracy. Cohen, Patricia (2012-02-11). "Mrs. Lincoln, I Presume? Well, as It Turns Out ..." The New York Times at NYTimes.com. Retrieved 2012-02-14. See portrait here.
External links
[edit]- Works by or about Francis Bicknell Carpenter at the Internet Archive
- Works by Francis Bicknell Carpenter at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- Picture History: Francis Bicknell Carpenter contains a picture of him
- The inner life of Abraham Lincoln at Project Gutenberg