BOSTON, MASS.- An important portrait of John Codman III (1755-1803) by John Singleton Copley (1738-1815) has a permanent home at
Historic New Englands Codman Estate in Lincoln, Massachusetts. After being on loan for nearly thirty years, the painting was recently acquired from members of the Codman family.
John Singleton Copley was colonial Americas greatest painter, famous for his portraits of important figures in both America and England. Copley painted John Codman III in England around 1800, when Codman was traveling to France to handle financial issues related to his brother. The portrait shows Codman gazing out of the frame. He stands in front of a red damask curtain with a distant landscape behind the curtain in the lower left of the painting.
Historic New Englands highest priority for collecting is to add items related to its historic sites. John Codmans improvements and expansion of the Lincoln property from 1790 until his death in 1803 transformed the estate into an active agricultural property and a country seat. He is one of the most important figures in the history and development of the Codman Estate and the painting is central to the interpretation of the house.
Historic New England is the oldest, largest, and most comprehensive regional heritage organization in the nation. We bring history to life while preserving the past for everyone interested in exploring the authentic New England experience from the seventeenth century to today. The organization shares the regions history through vast collections, publications, public programs, museum properties, archives, and family stories that document more than four hundred years of life in New England.