NEW YORK, NY.- The Museum of the City of New York presents Picturing Prestige: New York Portraits, 1700-1860, an ensemble of iconic New Yorkers presented by intricate and elegant portraits, which were commissioned as status symbols and painted by the very best artists a young nation had to offer. Picturing Prestige opened to the public on Friday, February 5, 2016.
Visitors can see familiar figures, such as the renowned John Trumbull portrait of Alexander Hamilton that inspired the image on our ten-dollar bill, and can also come face-to-face with New Yorkers like Richard Varick, of Varick Street in Greenwich Village, and the Brooks family, of Brooks Brothers fame, whose names are part of the citys fabric but whose stories remain untold to a broad audience. This unique exhibition draws from the City Museums permanent collection to reveal the evolution of a dynamic city through its leading merchants, politicians and patrons, as well as the development of portraiture itself, one of New Yorks oldest visual art forms.
New York Citys distinctive character and unique personality have always come from its citizens, said Whitney Donhauser, Ronay Menschel Director of the Museum of the City of New York. This exhibition explores over 150 years of city life through the lives of many of historys most celebrated New Yorkers, offering visitors an intensely engaging and deeply personal interaction with the past.
Picturing Prestige relies on the people who shaped New York City in its formative years to tell the story of how the city grew from its colonial foundations through the Revolutionary War and blossomed into a mercantile powerhouse in the mid-19th century. The namesakes of Varick and McDougal Streets in Greenwich Village are brought to life by centuries-old paintings of Richard Varick and Alexander McDougall. Brooks Brothers is a household name in present-day America, and Picturing Prestige will display the early Brooks family in the light they wished to be shown in their own time.
The exhibition is also a study in the art of portraiture and New York Citys place as an artistic hub, showcasing over 40 oil paintings to go along with a dozen miniatures small portraits kept as keepsakes, which were the original version of family wallet photos. The show is organized in three sections that demonstrate not only the growth and transformation of the city itself, but also the changing nature of portraiture as an art form, the citys emergence as an artistic center, and the ways in which the citys elite viewed itself over time.
Colonial Foundations: 1700-1775
Young Nationhood: 1777-1815
The City Rises: 1815-1860
The scope of the exhibition, curated by Bruce Weber, City Museum Curator of Paintings and Sculpture, is made possible by the wealth of the City Museums permanent collection, offering portraits of iconic New Yorkers as painted by the leading artists of their respective generations. The artists themselves reveal nearly as much history as their subjects do, from the Duyckinck family demonstrating that the best painters in America in the 17th century were not from America, to John Singleton Copley personifying the rise of fine art in this country over one hundred years later.
The portraits in this exhibition are works of art in and of themselves, but they are also windows into the lives and times of legendary New Yorkers, added Weber. In thinking about who commissioned these paintings and the artists who brought their subjects to life, we can tell the story of a city emerging from the throes of revolution to lead a young nation towards its rightful place at the vanguard of the artistic world. Today, New York Citys role as a cultural center is undisputed. Picturing Prestige helps explain how we got there.
The conservation of many of the works and their related frames featured in Picturing Prestige: New York Portraits, 1700-1860 was made possible by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, as was digital photography and cataloguing of many of the paintings.