Thursday, 29 November 2018

Carved Wooden Bust of Benjamin Franklin at the Chipstone Foundation and its derivation Part 1.



Benjamin Franklin (1706 - 1790).
A Carved Wooden Bust.

after the original by Jean Jaques Caffieri.
no earlier than 1777.
at the Chipstone Foundation.
Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Part 1.

A Brief Survey of the Portraiture of Benjamin Franklin.

Some notes.

It is evident that at least one plaster bust of Franklin by Caffirei had reached Philadelphia by 1789, when the Pennsylvania Hospital sent a bust to Italy to serve as a model for a statue of Franklin for the Library Company. This bust is obviously derived from the Caffieri bust.

The Pennsylvania Hospital bust is now presumed lost.


Luke Beckerdite and Alan Miller have written extensively on the subject of this carved wooden bust in 2016 see -



For the Portraits of Franklin see - See Charles Coleman Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture (New Haven & London: Yale University Press, 1962).

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An up to date survey of the portraiture of Benjamin Franklin would make a very large study on its own  - for the time being I will just brush the surface here.

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I have also used here the photographs and information from the truly excellent in depth study of the French Benjamin Franklin busts by Pamela Ehrlich.


Published. 31 May 2016.

This article was originally published in the Summer 2016 issue of Antiques & Fine Art magazine, a digitized version of which is available at afamag.com. AFA is affiliated with incollect.com.


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Benjamin Franklin
American
attributed to Martin Jugiez

Photograph Courtesy Chipstone website.




Plaster Bust of Franklin by Caffieri alongside the Chipstone Bust for comparison.

Franklin made three trips to Paris in 1767, 1769 and 1776 to 1785. 


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Benjamin Franklin
Jean Jaques Caffieri
Terracotta 
1777.

27" x 17" x 12.2"  (not including base).

Bibleotheque Mazarine, Paris


The original terra cotta bust of Franklin above, exhibited at the Paris Salon of 1777. Caffieri is not known to have created a marble version of the Franklin bust, but he made a mould from the terracotta original, which allowed him to cast multiple plaster busts for sale.

Franklin was one of his best customers. Between 1778 and 1785, Franklin ordered at least eight plaster busts from Caffieri for family and friends.


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Benjamin Franklin

Jean-Jacques Caffieri (1725–1792).
Plaster.

From the original 1777 mould. 
Purchased by King Stanislaus from Caffieri in 1784.

Courtesy of Royal Castle Museum in Warsaw, Poland

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The Plaster Bust of Benjamin Franklin by Jean Jaques Caffieri originally presented to the French Academy of Sciences, Paris in 1785 by Benjamin Franklin.

It was presented by a grateful French people in the 1949 "Merci Train" of gifts to America for its part in relieving France of the Nazi yolk.

see - 


Pamela Ehrlich, an independent researcher, approached the Luther W. Brady Art Gallery with information that they might have an important bust of Dr. Franklin in their collection. 

A bust of similar description was acquired in 1987 when the George Washington University assumed ownership of the former Benjamin Franklin University. 

As the merger occurred, Director, University Art Galleries and Chief Curator, Lenore Miller was asked to assess any works of art. That’s when she came upon a plaster bust of Dr. Franklin, painted with bronze paint. Ms. Miller believed that the bust might have some historical significance and made sure it was safely stored as part of George Washington University's collection in an off-site, secure storage facility.


Ms. Ehrlich had discovered an April 1949 newspaper photograph showing a Jean-Jacques Caffieri bust of Dr. Franklin from the Merci Train being presented to the Benjamin Franklin University. 

In addition, Ms. Ehrlich found an 1879 French government inventory of art that recordedinscription on the bust Dr. Franklin gave to the French Academy of Sciences––which includes J.-J. Caffieri's signature and the words “L’Academie des Sciences.” If this inscription is on the GWU sculpture it aids in proving it is the Merci Train bust unfortunately any inscription is obscured by overpainting.




Benjamin Franklin
Jean Jaques Caffieri
Plaster Bust
Height 28". 

George Washington University.

The George Washington University Permanent Collection, courtesy of The Luther W. Brady Art Gallery. 

© 2015 The George Washington University.






Detail, rear view of the bust . 

The George Washington University Permanent Collection, courtesy of The Luther W. Brady Art Gallery. 

© 2015 The George Washington University.





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Once again for much more on the Caffieri and Houdon busts of Franklin see the very  excellent article by Pamela Ehrlich -

https://www.incollect.com/articles/the-royal-academy-of-sciences-bust-of-benjamin-franklin


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Benjamin Franklin
Marble Bust

Height 28"

An fairly early copy c. 1803/04 after Caffieri.

Many portraits of Franklin were created when he served as ambassador to France from 1776 to 1785, but the only sculptor granted a sitting with the great man was Jean-Jacques Caffiéri. 

The character study Caffiéri made in 1777 (now at London’s Royal Academy of Arts) would eventually spawn a mini-industry in Franklin busts, both in America and abroad. 

Caffiéri’s Paris studio probably executed about twenty copies from the original plaster bust, and later artists made many more. 

John Rhea Smith presented this marble portrait bust, carved by an unidentified sculptor, to the APS in 1804. In his letter of gift, Smith wrote that the bust "is of Italian workmanship, executed at Florence, & from my imperfect recollection of the Doctor’s features, would seem to be a good likeness."

Gifted to APS in 1804.


American Philosophical Society
Philadelphia.


https://amphilsoc.pastperfectonline.com/webobject/DF4E38B0-44C6-4A5A-A8FD-666004319406



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Jean Antoine Houdon (1741 - 1828).

Terracotta
Inscribed on proper right shoulder Houdon f. 1778.
and on the back franKlin
This is possibly the bust exhibited at the Paris Salon in 1778, no. 221.
Although there are arguments for that being a marble.

It was sold at the posthumous sale of the contents of Houdon's studio -
15 - 17 December 1728. Lot 27 Purchased by Francois Hyppolite Walferdin ( 1795 - 1880).
Sold by his heirs to the Louvre in 1880

There was another version sold in a sale at Houdons studio - lot 98 8 October 1795 which has disappeared.

See: Jean - Antoine Houdon - Catalogue National Gallery of Art Washington, 2004.

Louvre. Paris.


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Jean Antoine Houdon (1741 - 1828).
Marble
Overall:  58.7 × 36.8 × 28.6 cm, 

Height without base): 44.5 cm

1778

Provenance:

Jean Antoine Houdon; left by Houdon with Robert Edge Pine; possibly Pierre Samuel du Pont de Nemours (by 1785 and in 1802); possibly Eleuthère Irénée du Pont ; possibly Nicholas Cruger ; or his daughter-in-law, Catharine Church; her husband, Betram Peter Cruger ; their son, John Church Cruger , New York (by 1836) ; his son and daughter-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. Samuel Bard , New York ; their son, John Bard (until 1872; to MMA)
Gifted by John Bard.

Metropolitan Museum, New York.

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Bust of Benjamin Franklin

Jean-Antoine Houdon, Versailles 1741 – 1828 Paris. Benjamin Franklin, ca. 1786. 
Plaster, painted terracotta colour, 

33 1/8 x 26 ¼ x 16 3/16 in.
Gift of the estate of George Francis Parkman, 1908.

Boston Athenaeum.

Only one other version of this bust is known - the other example is at the Musée des Beaux-Arts, Angers, France.




https://www.bostonathenaeum.org/about/publications/selections-acquired-tastes/busts-franklin-and-lafayette-jean-antoine-houdon





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Benjamin Franklin
Houdon
Marble
Height with socle 53.3 cms.

Inscribed F.P.HOUDON EN 1779.

Commisioned fro Houdon by an unknown client

This bust is considered altogether finer than the bust in the Metropolitan Museum New York


Provenance:
by 1828,  A noble family château du Mont-Jarry, Avranches (Manche), (according to the marquise Franco d'Almodovar, née Marcelle de Loterie de Presle, in Sotheby's sale catalaogue, 1996, which reproduces a handwritten certificate from the marquise) [unconfirmed] by descent, to the Marquise d'Almodovar until December 1931.

Paris, art market.

by 1939, New York, Clapp and Graham - purchased by Geraldine Rockefeller Dodge, New York.

1975, November 29, New York, Sotheby Parke Bernet, sold as "property from the collection of the late Geraldine Rockefeller Dodge", no. 124 - purchased by the British Rail Pension Fund, UK.

1996, December 5, New York, Sotheby's, no. 78.


1996, 125th Anniversary Acquisition. Purchased with a generous grant from The Barra Foundation, Inc., matched by contributions from the Henry P. McIlhenny Fund in memory of Frances P. McIlhenny, the Walter E. Stait Fund, the Fiske Kimball Fund, and with funds contributed by Mr. and Mrs. Jack M. Friedland, Hannah L. and J. Welles Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. E. Newbold Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Mark E. Rubenstein, Mr. and Mrs. John J. F. Sherrerd, The Women's Committee of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Marguerite and Gerry Lenfest, Leslie A. Miller and Richard B. Worley, Mr. and Mrs. John A. Nyheim, Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Fox, Stephanie S. Eglin, an anonymous donor, Mr. and Mrs. William T. Vogt, and with contributions from individual donors to the Fund for Franklin


Photographs and Text above courtesy:
Philadelphia Museum of Art

http://www.philamuseum.org/collections/permanent/90227.html?mulR=625468890|32

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Benjamin Franklin.
John Flaxman.
After Houdon.
not signed or dated.
Plaster.
Height 28".

It differs from the Houdon bust in that it lacks definition and has no collar or neckerchief

From this photograph it appears to have been recently repainted

During an 1801 tour of Europe, artist and APS member Joseph Sansom acquired this portrait bust of Benjamin Franklin, cast by English neoclassical artist John Flaxman. Copied after an original bust by French sculptor Jean Antoine Houdon, the Flaxman bust is smoother, less detailed, and less animated than Houdon's celebrated version. Despite its deviations from the original, the Flaxman bust proved popular in America. 

After this bust's presentation to the APS in 1802, sculptor Hiram Powers used it as a source for a full-length statue of Benjamin Franklin for the U.S. Capitol Building.

Presented to the American Philosophical Society 1802.

American Philosophical Society






The Studio of Houdon.
Leopold Boilly.
1803.

Depicting a bust of Franklin on the shelf on the right.

Musee des Arts Decoratif a Paris.





Another Painting of Houdon in his Studio.

Leopold Boilly.
1804.

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Benjamin Franklin 
After the bust by Houdon
Thomas Hollaway
Engraving 
170 x 110 mm.
Late 18th / Early 19th Century.
British Museum

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Benjamin Franklin
by Michael Rysbrack
Marble Bust.
Sold Sotheby's, London

The catalogue is slightly disingenuous - it fails to mention that this bust has been outside in the weather at some time in its life and consequently the surface and original polish has been lost.

































Sotheby's
Lot 141, 10 July 2014.

Provenance

Patrick Crawley, Esq., Yorkshire, United Kingdom;
his sale, Christie's London, 24 April 1986, lot 89;

Private collection, United Kingdom.

All images above courtesy Sotheby's




Rysbrack would have carved his portrait of Franklin whilst he was working in London as agent for the Pennsylvania assembly, first between 1757 and 1762, and later between 1762 and 1775. 

The sculptor died in 1770, providing a terminus ante quem for the execution of the bust. 

It is most likely that Rysbrack made this bust on Franklins first visit to  Britain, as his later stay was disrupted by the lead up to the American Wars of Independence. 

Franklin wrote to his friend Lord Kames, on 3 January 1760, and describes ‘the busts of famous men’ in Viscount Cobham’s Temple of British Worthies at Stowe (Franklin, Writings, op. cit., vol. iv). 

Franklin was a comparatively wealthy man by the time he arrived in London in 1757, and so would easily have been able to commission  a  bust from Rysbrack.

Rysbrack was also responsible for a portrait bust of Newton (terracotta at Trinity College, Cambridge), which, interestingly, may be the bust that appears in one of the earliest paintings of Franklin, painted by David Martin in 1762 (Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts; inv. no. 1943.16.1) (the sculpture included by Martin could alternatively be the model by Louis-Francois Roubiliac).





http://www.sothebys.com/en/auctions/ecatalogue/2014/european-sculpture-works-art-l14231/lot.141.html



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Wedgwood and Benjamin Franklin.

A few nots and some images.



Wedgwood
After Caffieri
1777 - 1800.
7 x 5.7 cms


Metropolitan Museum.

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Benjamin Franklin

Wedgwood and Bentley
Jaspar Ware
4.1"
c. 1775 - 80.

British Museum
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Benjamin Franklin.
Wedgwood & Bentley.
Jasparware.
10.8"
c. 1779.

British Museum.

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Benjamin Franklin.
Wedgwood & Bentley.
After the terracotta by Nini (see below).
Jasparware
3.3".
c. 1777 - 80.
British Museum.

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3 3/8" X 2 5/8"

Image from:

https://www.rarelegacy.com/products/1769-benjamin-franklin-wedgwood-black-basalt-portrait-medallion-earliest-franklin-sculpture


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Benjamin Franklin  (1706-1790).
Jean Baptiste Nini (1717-1786).

Relief with a preliminary model for the terracotta portrait relief with spectacles.

3½ inches diameter., 

 Chaumont-sur-Loire, France, circa 1777. 

  The final version of the terracotta model on the right. 4½ inches diameter.

In June of 1779 Franklin wrote to his daughter Deborah in Philadelphia: "The clay medallion you say you gave to Mr. Hopkinson was the first of the kind made in France. A variety of others have been made since of different sizes; some to be set in the lids of snuffboxes, and some so small as to be worn in rings; and the numbers sold are incredible. These, with the pictures, busts, and prints, (of which copies upon copies are spread everywhere), have made your father's face as well known as that of the moon...It is said by learned etymologists, that the name doll, for the images children play with, is derived from the word IDOL. From the number of dolls now made of him, he may be truly said, in that sense, to be i-doll-ized in this country."

Image and text from Christie's.


https://www.christies.com/lotfinder/Lot/franklin-benjamin-1706-1790-nini-jean-baptiste-5546039-details.aspx



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Benjamin Franklin
Terracotta
121 mm diam.
Jean Baptiste Nini (1717 - 86)
France
1777.
National Portrait Gallery

Inscribed "B. FRANKLIN, AMERICAIN."

Jean Baptiste Nini, was an Italian sculptor born in Urbino working in Paris for Jacques Donatien Le Ray de Chaumont, a well-known businessman, who held various official posts in Chaumont, France, who was a friend of Franklin's and had given him the use of his chateau there. 

Nini had previously commissioned a medallion of Chaumont in 1771, and Chaumont now sent Nini a profile drawing of Franklin that had been given to him.

The history of the Nini medallions originates in pro-American, Parisian society. Chaumont was occupied with contracting for supplies, shipping gunpowder and other things to America. Many other business dealings between Paris and major seaports were occurring as well. Some of the people Franklin surrounded himself with were Dr. Bancroft, a physician and naturalist (also Franklin's secretary in Paris), Jonathan Williams, William Alexander, and English banker Thomas Walpole and his 22-year-old son. 

On December 11, 1777, Franklin sent a letter to Thomas Walpole, saying, "From a sketch Dr. B[ancroft] had which was drawn by your ingenious and valuable Son, they have made Medallions in terre-cuit." This letter acknowledged that a drawing of Franklin done by the younger Walpole had been sent to the Chaumont factory to make the famous terra cotta medallion.


Chaumont and Franklin's other acquaintances not only saw him as a personal friend, but as a key figure in their success as businessmen. They had to establish him as a symbol in order to sell him to the general public. 

The intention of the first Nini medallion was to present a popular figure in a simple, popular way. 

The Franklin medallions appear in five types, believed to be made from drawings sent to Nini from Paris, rather than drawings done of his own hand. Anne Vallayer, Sevres, and Wedgwood were among those who produced drawings for later medallions.

In his lifetime Nini created over one hundred of this type of relief.

Other versions are at:

American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia (58.S.74; given to Charles Willson Peale between 7/1778 and 10/1779 by M. Gerard, first French Minister to US).

The Franklin Institute, Philadelphia.

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. (NPG.66.12 and NPG.66.13).

Philadelphia Museum of Art (1986-26-290.


National Portrait Gallery, London, NPG 722.



Text here partly adapted from

https://www.fi.edu/history-resources/nini-medallion


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Benjamin Franklin.
Jean Baptiste Nini.
14.9 cms.
Stoneware.
1779.


Metropolitan Museum New York

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Benjamin Franklin
Jean Baptiste Nini
Plaster
10.8 cms
Late 18th Century
Metropolitan Museum

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Benjamin Franklin
Jean Baptiste Nini
Plaster
10.8 cms
Late 18th Century


Metropolitan Museum New York



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Benjamin Franklin

Attributed to Francois Marie Suzanne (active 1751 - 1802).
Late 18th Century
Terracotta

38.7 × 16.2 × 14.6 cm.

Metropolitan Museum
New York.

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Benjamin Franklin
with the bust of Isaac Newton
David Martin
Oil on panel.
50" x 40"
1767

This portrait of Benjamin Franklin was commissioned by Robert Alexander, of the firm of William Alexander & Sons, Edinburgh. The document held by Franklin is one of Alexander's deeds! 

 The bust of Isaac Newton, suggests the great English voice of Reason. 

Gift of Mr & Mrs Walter H. Annenberg
White House, Washington D.C.

see -

http://english18thcenturyportraitsculpture.blogspot.com/2016/03/the-roubiliac-busts-of-isaac-newton.html


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The portrait by Duplessis, (below) official portraitist of Louis XVI, is one of the most popular image of Franklin.








Benjamin Franklin 

Joseph Siffred Duplessis (1725 - 1802)
Painted c. 1778.
oil on canvas 75.5 x 58.5 cms canvas size.

Image Courtesy Petit Palais, Museum of Fine Arts, Paris.

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Benjamin Franklin

Workshop of Joseph Siffred Duplessis (French, Carpentras 1725–1802 Versailles)
Oil on Canvas
70.2 x 56.5 cms

This is a replica of the portrait exhibited at the Salon of 1779.

 It is inscribed (reverse, possibly by the artist, now covered by relining canvas; see below: Peint par Duplessis pour / obliger monsieur le vicomte / De Buissy (painted by Duplessis to oblige the vicomte de Buissy)





Gifted 1895
Metropolitan Museum, New York


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Benjamin Franklin.
Joseph Wright of Derby (1756 - 93).
1782. 
Oil on Canvas.
75.5 x 64 cms.

Royal Society. London.

Presented by Caleb Whitefoord in 1790

Image Courtesy Art UK.
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Benjamin Franklin 
Charles Wilson Peale


Oil on canvas, Historical Society of Pennsylvania Collection, Gift of James J. Barclay, 1852, Philadelphia History Museum Collection.

There are three versions of this painting.

see - https://www.jstor.org/stable/3143558?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents


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Benjamin Franklin
Mason Chamberlin
Oil on canvas
128 x 103.5 cms
1762
gifted 1956.
Philadelphia Museum

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Benjamin Franklin with a map of Philadelphia

Anne Marie Boquet Filleul.
Oil on canvas 
91.1 x 72.4 cms

1778 or 79.

Gift of the Honorable Walter H. Annenberg and Leonore Annenberg and the Annenberg Foundation, 
2007.

Filleul and her husband were on friendly terms with Benjamin Franklin, who may have sat for this portrait as a personal favor. In 1779 Louis Jacques Cathelin (1738-1804) made an engraving after the painting that was published the same year by Filleul's father, Blaise Bocquet. The map on the table is labeled PHILADELPHIA.

Image courtesy Philadelphia Museum of Art.


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Benjamin Franklin,  1706–1790.
Joseph Siffred Duplessis (1725–1802) 
 Oil on canvas, c. 1785 
Gift of the Morris and Gwendolyn Cafritz Foundation

Image courtesy Smithsonian. National Portrait Gallery

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Benjamin Franklin
after Benjamin Wilson (1721 - 88).
James McArdell (1729 - 65)
Mezzotint
1761


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Benjamin Franklin - 
né à Boston, dans la nouvelle Angleterre, le 17 Janv. 1706 / 
Duplessis pinxit, Parisiis 1778 ; 
Chevillet sculpsit.
engraving. 
1778.


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Benjamin Franklin.
 Ne a Boston, dans la nouvelle Angleterre le 17 Janvier 1706. 

After Charles-Nicolas Cochin. Engraved by Augustin de Saint Aubin. 
7 1/2 x 5 1/4″.
Engraving, 
1777. 

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Benjamin Franklin
Charles Nicholas Cochin
1770 - 1780
Mezzotint 
153 x 113 mm
British Museum



Franklin
Charles Nicholas Cochin

Mezzotint.
365 x 240 mm.
c.1777.
pub. Augsburg.
British Museum.

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Benjamin Franklin.
Mezzotint. 
after Mason Chamberlin.
British Museum.
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Benjamin Franklin.
Anonymous engraving.
166 x 1114 mm.
late 18th century.
British Museum.

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Benjamin Franklin.

Charles Wilson Peale (1741 -1827).
16.2 x 13 cms
Mexzzotint.
1787
Metropolitan Museum
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Further reading:


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The National Portrait Gallery Website

Mid-Georgian Portraits Catalogue - Benjamin Franklin


This extended catalogue entry is from the out-of-print National Portrait Gallery collection catalogue: John Ingamells, National Portrait Gallery: Mid-Georgian Portraits 1760-1790, National Portrait Gallery, 2004, and is as published then.

I have slightly adapted this for my web post but it remains substantially the same as posted by the NPG on their website 






Biography and References

‘Numberless are the prints & medals we have seen of you’ (Georgiana Shipley to Franklin, 1 May 1779; C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, p 267).

‘A variety of [clay medallions] have been made of different sizes; some to be set in the lids of snuffboxes, and some so small as to be worn in rings; and the numbers sold are incredible. These, with the pictures, busts and prints, (of which copies upon copies are spread everywhere) have made your father’s face as well known as that of the moon...’ (Franklin to his daughter, 3 June 1779; C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pp 107-08).

A discriminating survey of Franklin’s formidable iconography was made by Sellers in 1962; the ensuing list is generally confined to the more important images.


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London 1757-62

1757
Miniature by C. Dixon. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Mass. (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.2). Sent by Franklin to his wife in January 1758.

1759
Painting by Benjamin Wilson, half length, with lightning striking a church spire in the left background. White House, Washington (illus. W. Kloss et al., Art in the White House, 1992, p 55; C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pls.2, 3). Wilson painted two replicas, the second c.1765, for Dr Thomas Bond, and a three-quarter length version was with Knoedler, New York, 1962; engraved J. McArdell 1761 (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.2); J. Chapman (oval) 1806; S. Freeman; W. Haines (half length) 1806. Like Franklin, Wilson had experimented with electricity and lightning conductors.

1762
Painting by Mason Chamberlin, three-quarter length seated, lightning to the left. Philadelphia Museum of Art (illus. C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.4). Commissioned by Col. Philip Ludwell. Exhibited Society of Artists, London, 1763 (19). Engraved E. Fisher 1763; F. N. Martinet 1773; J. Lodge (bust length). A replica, since destroyed, painted for Franklin’s son 1764. Copy by George D. Leslie (Yale University Art Gallery); a 19th-century miniature copy (private collection, Philadelphia, probably from the Wellesley collection; C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pp 226-27); an anon. medal of 1777, bust length wearing a cap (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.5), taken from Lodge’s engraving.

c.1762-72
Painting by Matthew Pratt, half length. American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society, Yonkers, NY (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.3). Derived from the Wilson half length of 1759.

In London 1766-75
1766
Wax profile by Isaac Gosset (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, p 294). American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia, and Dr Philip Bate 1962 (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962 pl.9). Copied as a Wedgwood medallion and cameo (illus. R. Reilly and G. Savage, Wedgwood the Portrait Medallions, 1973, p 146, as c.1775 and after Patience Wright); by James Tassie (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.9) and for a medal formerly attributed to William Mossop (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.9).

Painting by David Martin, half-length seated at table, wearing glasses. White House, Washington (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.8; W. Kloss et al., Art in the White House, 1992, p 56). Exhibited Society of Artists, London, 1767 (99). Replica of 1767 in the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, bequeathed by Franklin; another dated 1772 with Dr A. J. Alexander, Lexington Ky., in 1962. Copied by C. W. Peale (American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia) and reduced copies at Chevening and Brocklesby Park; a miniature enamel copy by Jeremiah Meyer in the Buccleuch collection (illus. D. Foskett, A Dictionary of British Miniature Painters, 1972, II, pl.232, no.582).

1770
Painting by Henry Bembridge, exhibited RA 1770, no.14 (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pp 190-92).

1772
Wax busts by Patience Wright, life size (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pp 426-29). In 1781 in Paris Wright also made a wax head of Franklin for Elkanah Watson, now destroyed.

Undated
Painting by Caleb Whitefoord, untraced; ‘acknowledged to bear a strong and striking likeness’ (D. Allen, Connoisseur, CXC, 1975, p 197). Whitefoord was Franklin’s neighbour in London and he also attended the Paris peace commission in 1782.

Paris 1776-85
From 1776 Franklin continually wore spectacles.
1777
Plaster bust by Claude Dejoux. Musée de la Coopération Franco-Américaine, Château de Blérancourt, Aisne (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.15), probably antedating the Caffiéri bust.

Plaster bust by L-P. Dufourny de Villiers. D. A. Bernstein, Sound Beach, Conn., in 1930 (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.15).

Medallions by J-B. Nini, see NPG 722.

Terracotta bust by J-J. Caffiéri, with long hair and neckcloth. Bibliothèque Mazarine, Paris (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.16). Casts include those with the Institut de France (1785); Royal Society of Arts, London (c.1777-90), and Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine, c.1785; four were bought by Franklin for his family, and others ordered for Sir Edward Newenham, Dublin (1783), William Carmichael (1785), and the Pennsylvania Hospital, Philadelphia.

Marble copies include, in Philadelphia: at the American Philosophical Society, and with the Home [formerly Franklin] Insurance Co.; in Washington: at the NPG (69.61) and the White House (illus. W. Kloss et al., Art in the White House, 1992, p 359); the Public Library, Boston MA; the Detroit Institute of Arts and in the Huntington Library, San Marino, Calif.

A number of derivative Sèvres medallions 1778-79 (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pls.12-14), frequently engraved; copied by James Tassie as an intaglio seal, and at Wedgwood (illus. R. Reilly and G. Savage, Wedgwood the Portrait Medallions, 1973, p 147).

Painting by J-B. Greuze, half length in fur-collared coat. Sotheby’s, New York, 30 January 1998, lot 120 (illus. Art Quarterly, XXVI, 1963, p 2). An oval replica with the American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia, and preliminary pastel study with the Dept. of State, Washington DC (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.22).

Pastel copies by Simon Petit (exhibited Salon de la Correspondence 1781, no.7) and J-S-L. Piot (musée Cantonal, Lausanne); copies in oil by G. P. A. Healy (Versailles) and Joseph Gaye (Sotheby’s, 20 March 1978, lot 51); miniature copies by Louis de Broux 1777 (French private collection) and by D. C. 1785 (Sotheby’s, 16 May 1957, lot 37, inscribed d'apres Duplessis).

Drawing by C-N. Cochin, half length with fur hat, engraved A. de Saint Aubin (illus. C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.10). Copied by John Trumbull (Yale University Art Gallery). Enamel copy in the Victoria and Albert Museum (414.1810.1885; B. Rackham , Catalogue of the Schreiber Collection, Victoria and Albert Museum, III, Enamels and Glass, 1924, pl.45) from the engraving by G. Cooke. A medal by J. M. Lageman 1790 derived from the Cochin portrait.

1778-79
Wedgwood medallions, modelled by William Hackwood 1778, produced in several sizes (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.11); a variant, with longer hair at the neck, also attributed to Hackwood (illus. R. Reilly and G. Savage, Wedgwood the Portrait Medallions, 1973, p 145, as c.1775); another was produced in 1779, with a smaller variant (illus. R. Reilly and G. Savage, Wedgwood the Portrait Medallions, 1973, p 148).

Terracotta medallions by J-B. Nini from a drawing by Anna Vallayer-Coster, classical profiles to left (A. C. Baiardi & B. Sibille, eds., J B Nini, exhibition catalogue, Urbino, Blois, 2001, nos.95-98):
a) with longer hair, inscribed: eripuit coelo fulmen sceptrumque tirannis
b) with shorter hair, inscribed in French.

1778
Painting by J-S. Duplessis, oval, similar to NPG 327 but wearing a red coat with brown fur collar. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (32.100.132; C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.24). Exhibited Salon 1779 (128). Engraved J. Chevillet 1778 (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.27); P. A. Tardieu 1795, and J. Thomson 1834. Duplessis exhibited another version at the Salon 1821 (128).

The many copies include those at Boston, Mass., in the Athenaeum (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.26) and Public Library; in Philadelphia, in the Independence Hall (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.26) and Mutual [formerly Franklin] Assurance; at New York, with the Historical Society and in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (95.21); others are in Yale University Library, the Fogg Art Museum (1943.235) and the Huntington Library, San Marino (pastel), and in France in the musées at Douai and Brest.

Miniature versions attributed to A. N. B. Graincourt (Philadelphia Museum of Art), and by Francis Lainé (exhibited RA 1786, no.283; see C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.24).

Pastel by J-S. Duplessis, see NPG 327.

Terracotta bust by J-A. Houdon, wearing coat and waistcoat showing one button and two empty buttonholes. Louvre (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.18). Exhibited Salon 1779 (221). Franklin was given four casts; others include those in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Cambridge, Mass.; Schlossmuseum, Gotha; City Art Museum, Saint Louis, and Museum of Art, Toledo, Ohio.

Examples in marble in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, dated 1778 (72.6), the Philadelphia Museum of Art, dated 1779, and sold Sotheby’s, 5 December 1996, lot 78, dated 1778. There are bronze versions, for example, in the White House, Washington; the American Embassy, London, and in the Bodleian Library, Oxford (Mrs R. L. Poole, Catalogue of Portraits in the possession of the University, Colleges and City and County of Oxford, I, p 109).

A drawing by Houdon of Franklin was sold Sotheby’s, 23 March 1978, lot 179. A ‘death mask’, probably the life mask taken by Houdon in Paris in 1785, was allegedly sold for 10 francs in 1828 (illus. Harper’s Mag., XXIV, 1892, p 910; C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.44).

The bust was also copied by John Flaxman c.1801, showing four buttons on waistcoat; plaster cast with the American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.21) - apparently the source for the marble busts by Hiram Powers, see 1848-49 below.

Painting by J-F. de L’Hospital, half-length oval. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.22). Sellers recorded three copies.

c.1778
Painting attributed to C-P-A. Van Loo, half-length oval with fur-collared coat. American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.23). Variant, without the fur collar, engraved P. M. Alix c.1790 (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.23); pastel copy by L. M. D. Guillaume with the Virginia Historical Society, Richmond.

Painting by Anne Rosalie Filleul, half length showing right hand, his glasses on a table. French private collection 1962 (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.23). Engraved L-J. Cathelin, exhibited Salon 1779 (263).

1779
Stone bust by P-F. Berruer, life size. Formerly with J. de Saint Pierre (illus. Gazette des Beaux-Arts, XVIII, 1928, p 169). Apparently derived from the bust by Dejoux, see 1777.

Drawing by C-J. Notté, exhibited Salon 1779: ‘portrait de M. le docteur Franklin, dessiné au crayon, avec des allégories’.

c.1780-81
Drawing by L-C. de Carmontelle, whole-length seated. Private collection, New York (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.28). Engraved by F. D. Née 1781. A closely related drawing by Gaspard Duché de Vancy was also engraved by Née.

1780
Painting by Stephen Elmer, half-length seated at table. Private collection, New York (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.13). Engraved T. Ryder 1782.

1782
Pastel by Joseph Ducreux, exhibited Salon 1782 (88).

Painting by Joseph Wright adapted from the Duplessis portrait of 1778, the features altered from the life. Yale University (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, p.415, no.2; see M. H. Fabian, Joseph Wright, American Artist, exhibition catalogue, NPG Washington, 1985, pp 84-89, nos.9-13). Engraved W. Angus 1783. Replicas in Boston Public Library; Corcoran Art Gallery, Washington; Royal Society, London (presented by Caleb Whitefoord 1791); versions in the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia; from the Northbrook collection, sold Sotheby’s, 31 January 1951, lot 98; a miniature copy by J-T. Perrache sold Christie’s, 21 April 1998, lot 40 (cf. D. Foskett, A Dictionary of British Miniature Painters, 1972, II, pl.268, no.662).

Used by Benjamin West for his unfinished Signing of the Preliminary Treaty of Peace of 1782 in which Franklin appears with John Jay, John Adams, Henry Laurens and his own grandson William T. Franklin (Winterthur Museum; H. von Erffa & A. Staley, The Paintings of Benjamin West, 1986, no.105).

c.1782
Miniature by J-B. Weyler, examples on ivory and in enamel in the Musée du Louvre (33126 and 35727; C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.34, and front.). Replicas in the Gilbert collection (illus. S. Coffin & B. Hofstetter, The Gilbert Collection, Portrait Miniatures 2000, no.60), Sotheby’s, 10 November 1986, lot 197, and Christie’s, Geneva, 15 May 1990, lot 251. Related enamel, signed D. C. 1785, formerly with Wildenstein, NY (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.34) and sold Sotheby's, 16 May 1957, lot 37 inscribed après Mr Weyller.

1783-84
Medals: by J-F. Bernier 1783, commissioned by the Masonic Lodge of the Neuf Soeurs, Paris, of which Franklin had been Venerable (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pp 193-94) and by Augustin Dupré 1784 (C. Saunier, Augustin Dupré, 1894, p 21, pl.IV).

1783
Pencil drawing inscribed M. Perier ce 4 janvier 1783, profile bust to right, wearing hat. Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.13). A pastel copy, with spectacles added, in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

America 1785-90
1785
Painting by C. W. Peale, bust-length oval, wearing spectacles; unfinished (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.37). Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia. Engraved C. W. Peale 1787 (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.37). Unlocated miniature copies by William Mercer and Rembrandt Peale. Enlarged replica painted in 1789 with an elaborate quotation in view on table [‘In every stroke of lightning. I am of opinion that the stream of electric fluid ...’]; Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.

1787
Wooden bust by William Rush. Yale University Art Gallery (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.38). Rush also carved two ship’s figureheads of Franklin, one on the Franklin (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pp 358-59). A derivative bronze in the White House, Washington (illus. W. Kloss et al., Art in the White House, 1992, p 359).

c.1787
Painting by R. E. Pine, bust length, wearing spectacles. Franklin Institute, Philadelphia (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.37; R. G. Stewart, Robert Edge Pine, A British Portrait Painter in America 1784-88 1979, p 57).

Miniature by John Ramage. British Society for International Understanding, London (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.37).

c.1789
Silhouettes by Joseph Sansom (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.39) and A-A-C-F. Edouart (illus. E. F. Nevill Jackson, Silhouette, Notes and Dictionary, 1938, pl.54).

Posthumous
1790-91
Marble statue by Francesco Lazzarini, the head from the Caffiéri bust of 1777. Library Company, Philadelphia, taken down in 1879 and replaced with a copy by Lewis Iselin jr. 1959 (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pp 203-04).

1791
Bust by J-A. Houdon, exhibited Salon 1791 (484, among ‘onze morceaux de Sculpture Bustes tant en marbre qu’en terre cuite, Plâtre & Bronze’). Provisionally associated with the plaster in the Boston Athenaeum (H. H. Arnason, Houdon, 1975, fig.119, and see p 54); another example in the musée des Beaux-Arts, Angers.

A marble version of this type, bearing the date 1780, is in the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas MO (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.21), closely resembling a marble by Domenico Menconi of c.1862 (American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia; C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.21).

1793
Terracotta statuette by F-M. Suzanne, standing by a broken column. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.29). Exhibited Salon 1793 (62). Copied in marble, bronze and other metals.

Nineteenth-century images include the marble bust by Hiram Powers 1848-49 (Yale University; illus. R. P. Wunder, Hiram Powers, 1991, II, p 151; C. C. Sellers, Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture, 1962, pl.21), of which there are many replicas; the statue by Powers of 1861-62 (US Capitol, Washington DC; illus. R. P. Wunder, Hiram Powers, 1991, II, pp 150-1), and another by John J. Boyle (University of Pennsylvania).




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Bust of John Locke
Carved Mahogany.
Probably from a library bookcase.





Bust of John Locke.
c. 1770.
Mahogany. 
Height 10.5" 
Attributed to Martin Jugiez.

Metropolitan Museum, New York.


Detail of above.
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