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ProvenanceMr. and Mrs. Howard Lipman, Wilton, Connecticut; Mr. Stephen C. Clark, Sr., Cooperstown, New York
BibliographyD'Ambrosio, Paul S. and Charlotte M. Emans, FOLK ART'S MANY FACES Portraits in the New York State Historical Association, New York State Historical Association, Cooperstown, New York 1987: 109-110, illus. as no. 63 on p. 110.
Museum of Fine Arts (Houston, Texas), "American Primitive Art." [exhibition catalog] Houston, TX, 1956: catalog checklist number 21.
Attributed to
Jacob Maentel
(1763 - 1863)
Pennsylvania Lady
Date1815-1820
DimensionsSight: 10 1/4 × 4 1/4 in. (26 × 10.8 cm)
Object numberN0081.1961(02)
Credit LineCollection of the Fenimore Art Museum. Gift of Stephen C. Clark
Photograph by Richard Walker
Label TextRendered in full-length profile, these two likenesses are typical of Maentel's early Pennsylvania portrait style. Women wear Empire-cut gowns, have tiny feet, and often hold a flower or purse in their hand. Men wear dark suits with tails, stand rigidly with their legs slightly bent at the knees, and sometimes hold a top hat in their hand (see N0081.1961(01)). Likewise, the artist carefully delineated subjects' facial features with heavy eyebrows over thickly fringed eyelashes, darkened lower eyelids, emphasized nostrils and pronounced chin lines.ProvenanceMr. and Mrs. Howard Lipman, Wilton, Connecticut; Mr. Stephen C. Clark, Sr., Cooperstown, New York
BibliographyD'Ambrosio, Paul S. and Charlotte M. Emans, FOLK ART'S MANY FACES Portraits in the New York State Historical Association, New York State Historical Association, Cooperstown, New York 1987: 109-110, illus. as no. 63 on p. 110.
Museum of Fine Arts (Houston, Texas), "American Primitive Art." [exhibition catalog] Houston, TX, 1956: catalog checklist number 21.
On View
Not on view