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George Washington (also known as Washington and the Departure of the British Garrison from New York City) is a large full-length oil painting by American artist John Trumbull in 1790. Trumbull's earlier 1790 work, Washington at Verplanck's Point , which he had gifted to Washington's wife Martha, had been very well received.
In July, 1790, Trumbull received a commission from the corporation for the City of New York, led by Mayor Richard Varick, to paint the president's portrait. [13] [14] The result, George Washington, was a scaling-up of Washington at Verplanck's Point to nearly four times its size.
George Washington, also entitled George Washington and William Lee, is a full-length portrait in oil painted in 1780 by the American artist John Trumbull during the American Revolutionary War. [1] General George Washington stands near his enslaved servant William Lee, overlooking the Hudson River in New York, with West Point and ships in the ...
Trumbull used his 1792 portrait General George Washington at Trenton as the model for Washington in this work. He used several of his miniature portraits from 1790 to 1793 for the other people in attendance, including Thomas Mifflin, William Smallwood, and Martha Washington. [7]
General George Washington at Trenton; George Washington (Trumbull, 1790) George Washington (Trumbull) J. Portraits of Andrew Jackson; John Quincy Adams (Bingham) L.
Trumbull's portraits also include full lengths of General Washington (1790) and George Clinton (1791), now held in New York City Hall. [4] New York City Hall also hangs Trumbull's portrait of Mayor Richard Varick , who commissioned the 1790 portrait of Washington.
Pages in category "Paintings by John Trumbull" ... George Washington (Trumbull, 1790) George Washington (Trumbull) S. The Sortie Made by the Garrison of Gibraltar;
Sketches of Creek leaders, Hysac, or the Woman's Man, and Hopothle Mico, or the Talassee King of the Creeks, made by John Trumbull in 1790 during negotiations for the Treaty of New York. Miko was a Muskogean language family title equivalent to chief. [1] (Yale Beinecke J18 T771 841)