Thomas Sully
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Thomas Sully | |
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File:Thomas Sully.jpg
Thomas Sully in 1869
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Born | June 19, 1783 Horncastle, Lincolnshire, UK |
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US |
Occupation | Painter |
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Thomas Sully (June 19, 1783 – November 5, 1872) was an American portrait painter. Born in Great Britain, he lived most of his life in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He painted in the style of Thomas Lawrence. His subjects included national political leaders such as United States presidents Thomas Jefferson, John Quincy Adams, and Andrew Jackson, Revolutionary War hero General Marquis de Lafayette, and many leading musicians and composers. In addition to portraits of wealthy patrons, he painted landscapes and historical pieces such as the 1819 The Passage of the Delaware. His work was adapted for use on United States coinage.
Contents
Life and career
Early life
Sully was born in Horncastle, Lincolnshire, England in 1783 to actors Matthew Sully and Sarah Chester.[1] In March 1792, the Sullys and their nine children emigrated to Charleston, South Carolina, where Thomas's uncle Thomas Wade West managed a theater. Sully made his first appearance in the theater as a tumbler at the age of 11 in Charleston.[2] After a brief apprenticeship to an insurance broker, who recognized his artistic talent, at about age 12 Sully began painting. He studied with his brother-in-law Jean Belzons (active 1794–1812), a French miniaturist, until they had a falling-out in 1799.
He returned to Richmond to learn "miniature and device painting" from his elder brother Lawrence Sully (1769–1804). After Lawrence's death, Thomas Sully married his brother's widow, Sarah (Annis) Sully. He took on the rearing of Lawrence's children. He and Sarah had an additional nine children together. Among the children were Alfred Sully, Mary Chester Sully (who married Sully's protégé, the painter John Neagle), Jane Cooper Sully (who married a Mr. Darley), Blanche Sully, Rosalie Sully, and Thomas Wilcocks Sully.[citation needed]
Sully was one of the founding members of The Musical Fund Society.[3] He painted the portraits of many of the musicians and composers who were also members. In 1835, Sully was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society.[4]
Career as a painter
Sully became a professional painter at age 18 in 1801. He studied portrait painting under Gilbert Stuart in Boston for three weeks. After some time in Virginia with his brother Lawrence, Sully moved to New York. He settled in Philadelphia in 1806, where he resided for the remainder of his life. In 1809 Sully traveled to London for nine months of study under the American Benjamin West, who had established his painting career in Great Britain.[citation needed]
Sully's 1824 portraits of John Quincy Adams, who became President within the year, and the general Marquis de Lafayette, appear to have brought him widespread recognition. His Adams portrait is held in the National Gallery of Art, Washington. Many notable Americans of the day had their portraits painted by him. In 1837–1838, he was in London to paint Queen Victoria at the request of Philadelphia's St. George's Society. His daughter Blanche assisted him as the Queen's "stand-in", modeling the Queen's costume when she was not available. One of Sully's portraits of Thomas Jefferson is owned by the Jefferson Literary and Debating Society at the University of Virginia and hangs in that school's rotunda. Another Jefferson portrait, this one head-to-toe, hangs at West Point, as does his portrait of General Alexander Macomb.
Sully's records say that he produced 2,631 paintings from 1801, most of which are currently in the United States.[citation needed] His style resembles that of Thomas Lawrence.(cf. Rilla Evelyn Jackman "AMERICAN ARTS" 1928 pg. 61)[citation needed] Though best known as a portrait painter, Sully also made historical pieces and landscapes. An example of the former is the 1819 The Passage of the Delaware, now in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
Death and legacy
Sully died in Philadelphia on November 5, 1872 and was interred in Laurel Hill Cemetery.[5]
His book Hints to Young Painters was published posthumously.
His paintings are held and displayed permanently in many of the world's leading art museums. Two of Sully's portraits hang in the chambers of the Dialectic and Philanthropic societies of the University of North Carolina. Portraits, including that of President James K. Polk, were commissioned of notable alumni from the Societies. The obverse design of the United States Seated Liberty coinage, which began with the Gobrecht dollar in 1836 and lasted until 1891, was based on his work. The Sully painting Portrait of Anna and Harriet Coleman was sold at auction in 2013 for $145,000.[6]
His son, Alfred Sully, served as a brigadier general in the Union Army during the American Civil War. Through Alfred, Thomas Sully is the great-grandfather of Ella Deloria, the noted Yankton Dakota ethnologist and writer; the great-grandfather of artist Mary Sully (also known as Susan Mabel Deloria, 1896–1963);[7] and the great-great-grandfather of Vine Deloria, Jr., Standing Rock Dakota scholar and author of Custer Died For Your Sins (1969), an American Indian civil-rights manifesto.
Sully was a great-uncle of Thomas Sully (1855–1939), the New Orleans-based architect.
Charles Henry Lanneau of South Carolina was his student; he became a portrait painter and Civil War artist.
The World War II Liberty Ship SS Thomas Sully was named in his honor.
Gallery of works
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Self portrait, by Thomas Sully.jpg
Portrait of the Artist Painting His Wife, c. 1810, oil on canvas, Yale University Art Gallery
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Eliza Ridgely with a Harp NGA.jpg
Lady with a Harp, 1818, a portrait of Eliza Ridgely, was at Hampton Mansion from the 1820s to 1945, when it was sold to the National Gallery of Art.[8]
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Thomas Sully - Portrait of the Artist.jpg
Portrait of the Artist, 1821, Metropolitan Museum of Art
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Portrait of Thomas Jefferson, 1821, West Point
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Thomas Sully Portrait of the Misses Mary and Emily McEuen LACMA M2008 222 2.jpg
Portrait of the Misses Mary and Emily McEuen, 1823, Los Angeles County Museum of Art
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Oil on canvas portrait of Elizabeth McEuen Smith by Thomas Sully, 1823, Honolulu Academy of Arts.jpg
Portrait of Elizabeth McEuen Smith, 1823, oil on canvas, Honolulu Museum of Art
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Portrait of Andrew Jackson, 1824, used for the United States twenty-dollar bill from 1928 onward
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A Life Study of the Marquis de Lafayette by Thomas Sully.jpeg
A Life Study of the Marquis de Lafayette, c. 1824–1825, oil on canvas
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Mary Anne Heide Norris, by Thomas Sully.jpg
Portrait of Mary Ann Heide Norris, 1830, Philadelphia Museum of Art
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Sheet of Figure Studies by Thomas Sully.jpeg
Sheet of figure studies, 1830–1839, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
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Jared Sparks Thomas Sully.jpeg
Jared Sparks, 1831, oil on canvas, Reynolda House Museum of American Art
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Miss Walton of Florida, 1833, oil on canvas, a portrait of Octavia Walton Le Vert
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Portrait of Fanny Kemble, 1834
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Brooklyn Museum - Gypsy Maidens - Thomas Sully.jpg
Gypsy Maidens, 1839, watercolor, Brooklyn Museum
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Macbeth in the witches' cave (Sully, 1840).jpg
Macbeth in the witches' cave, 1840, Folger Shakespeare Library
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Thomas Sully 001.jpg
Mother and Son, 1840, oil on canvas, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
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Charlotte Cushman, 1843, Folger Shakespeare Library
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Thomas Sully - cinderella.jpg
Cinderella at the Kitchen Fire, 1843, Dallas Museum of Art
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Engraving of Sully's portrait of Eliza, daughter of Joshua Bates of Boston (US), and wife to the Belgian statesman Sylvain van de Weyer
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Elizabeth Wadsworth by Thomas Sully, 1834.jpg
Elizabeth/Elise Wadsworth, wife of Sir Charles Murray
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Thomas Sully - The Student (Rosalie Kemble Sully) - Google Art Project.jpg
The Student, of Sully's daughter Rosalie, 1848
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Portrait of Shakespeare (Sully, 1864).jpg
Portrait of Shakespeare, 1864, Folger Shakespeare Library
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Portrait of Rev. John Andrews D.D. Provost of University of Pennsylvania
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Benjamin Ogle Tayloe by Thomas Sully.png
Portrait of Benjamin Ogle Tayloe American businessman, bon vivant, diplomat, and influential political activist in Washington, D.C. during the first half of the 19th century. Son of John Tayloe III
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John Tayloe III young.jpg
John Tayloe III, reproduction by Thomas Sully from the original by Gilbert Stuart
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Portrait of Miss Marie Louise Parker.jpg
Portrait of Miss Marie Louise Parker
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WLA cma Rosalie Spang 1848.jpg
Rosalie Spang, 1848
References
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Further reading
- Murray, P. & L. (1996). Dictionary of Art and Artists. Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-051300-0.
- Carrie Rebora Barratt, Queen Victoria and Thomas Sully. Exhibition catalogue. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2000.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Thomas Sully. |
- The Winterthur Library Overview of the archival collection on Thomas Sully.
- "Washington's Crossing as Docudrama", Wall Street Journal, Retrieved 03/19/2001
- "Thomas Sully (1783–1872) and Queen Victoria". In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art
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- ↑ Association for Public Art
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- 1783 births
- 1872 deaths
- 19th-century American painters
- American male painters
- American portrait painters
- English portrait painters
- People from Horncastle, Lincolnshire
- English emigrants to the United States
- Artists from Philadelphia
- Burials at Laurel Hill Cemetery (Philadelphia)
- Coin designers