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Eastman Johnson Catalogue Raisonné
Patricia Hills, PhD, Founder and Director | Abigael MacGibeny, MA, Project Manager

Catalogue Entry

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Photo: Century Association, New York
40.0 Literary/Historical Drawings

In addition to his scenes of everyday life and portraits of people, Johnson created images of historical events and figures from works of literature, drama, and music. For example, “Carry Me, and I’ll Drum You Through” was inspired by an incident from the Battle of Antietam, 1862, and Membership Vote at the Union League Club, May 11, 1876, recorded a contentious meeting in which he participated much later. His Marguerite, Cosette, and Minnehaha are personifications of fictional heroines from novels and poetry. His Boy Lincoln represents both the future United States president and the archetypical American youth who, with determination and hard work, could succeed. Johnson rendered several of these imaginative images as both paintings and drawings. These literary and historical works evince both his personal interest in those subjects and his awareness of their popularity with the broad public. —AM

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Hills no. 40.0.3
Baur no. 406
The Wounded Drummer Boy
Alternate title: Drummer Boy
1863
Charcoal and pastel on paper
26 5/8 x 20 3/4 in. (67.6 x 52.7 cm)
Signed and dated lower right: E. Johnson/1863.
Description / Remarks

MacGibeny, 2022: Inspired by an event from the Battle of Antietam, which was fought on September 17, 1862, Johnson made three drawings and six paintings on the theme of the wounded drummer boy between 1863 and 1871.

William T. Blodgett led other Centurions in the purchase and gift of this drawing to the Century Association, of which Johnson also was a member, in 1864. The same year, Johnson painted his group portrait The Blodgett Family.

The Evening Post"Fine Arts: Pictures at the Century Club," December 7, 1863: “The picture which attracted the most attention was a cartoon by Eastman Johnson, illustrative of an incident that occurred in a recent battle, and which, as nearly as we can recall it, was thus narrated by an eye-witness: In a charge made by one of our regiments, a drummer boy of scarcely fifteen years of age, while beating the onset, was struck by a fragment of a shell and fell wounded upon the field. The boy’s father, who was a private in the same regiment, stopped at the side of his son, and ripping up the leg of the little fellow’s pantaloons, bandaged the wounded limb, and then placing the young hero upon his own broad shoulders, bore him, playing vigorously on his drum, which he had not failed to retain, forward into the fight.

“Johnson has told the story, in a simple though forcible manner, and produced a picture vigorous in treatment, happy in composition and full of life and action. The drawing of the principal figures—the son and his father—is critically correct, and executed with much freedom of expression. The boy’s position is natural and unconstrained, and the bearing of the man neither ungraceful nor lacking in soldierly dignity…

“The spirit and energy expressed in the lad’s countenance, and the honest pride and love apparent in the father’s, and unmistakably rendered, and show that the artist possesses a clear knowledge and observance of human nature…”

Eastman Johnson letter dated January 4, 1864, to Erastus Dow Palmer, an Albany, New York sculptor, who had asked Johnson for paintings for an exhibition: "The Drummer Boy I have not yet painted nor begun, but am making the drawing for it, larger, & shall get at it soon."

Provenance
William T. Blodgett, Esq., New York, and several other members of the Century Association, by June 4, 1864 (by purchase)
Century Association, New York, June 1864 (by gift)
Exhibitions
1863 Century Association
Century Association, New York, December 5, 1863.
1874 Schaus Art Gallery
Schaus Art Gallery, New York, [First exhibition of Johnson's drawings], c. March 1874, [possibly].
1939 Brooklyn Museum
Brooklyn Museum of Art, Brooklyn, New York, An American Genre Painter: Eastman Johnson, 1824–1906, January 18, 1939–February 26, 1940. (Exhibition catalogue: Baur 1940), no. 406, as Drummer Boy.
1954 Cooper Union Museum
Cooper Union Museum for the Arts of Decoration, New York, An Exhibition of American Drawings, January 29–March 6, 1954, no. 64.
1954 Musée des Beaux Arts
Musée des Beaux Arts, Rouen, France, Dessin Americains du XVIIIe siecle a nos jours, June 19–July 18, 1954, no. 64.
1974 Union League Club of New York
The Union League Club of New York, New York, Eastman Johnson Retrospective, June 6–July 5, 1974.
1991 Century Association
The Century Association, New York, The Century Collection, 1991.
1992 N-YHS
New-York Historical Society, New York, The Century Association: American Works and Masterworks, 1992–January 3, 1993.
1999 Brooklyn Museum
Brooklyn Museum of Art, Brooklyn, New York, Eastman Johnson: Painting America, October 29, 1999–February 6, 2000. (Exhibition catalogue: Carbone and Hills 1999), no. 28, color illus., as The Wounded Drummer Boy. Traveled to: San Diego Museum of Fine Arts, San Diego, February 25–May 21, 2000; Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, June 8–September 10, 2000.
References
Evening Post 1863c
"Fine Arts: Pictures at the Century Club." The Evening Post (New York), December 7, 1863, p. 2.
Century Association 1864
Secretary of the Century Association. Board of Management and Monthly Meeting Minutes II (1862–1872). June 4, 1864. Century Association Foundation Archives, New York, p. 69.
Round Table 1864
"Art: Art and the 'Century.'" The Round Table (New York) 1, no. 26 (June 11, 1864), p. 407: “Certain gentlemen of the club combined to commission Mr. [John Frederick] Kensett to paint a landscape, to be completed within two years from date, for the sum of five thousand dollars; this picture to be the property of the Century Club. Certain members of the club have also purchased Eastman Johnson’s drawing of “The Drummer Boy” and presented it to the club. The Century is thus rapidly adding to its art-wealth, and has already formed the nucleus of what must in time be one of the finest art-collections in the city.”.
Johnson, Eastman 1864a
Eastman Johnson letter to E. D. Palmer, January 4, 1864. Albany Institute of History & Art Library, Eastman Johnson artist file, "The Drummer Boy I have not yet painted nor begun, but am making the drawing for it, larger, & shall get at it soon."
Appletons' Journal 1874b
"Art." Appletons' Journal 40, no. 260 (March 14, 1874), p. 347 [possibly]: "Everybody familiar with his painting of the “‘Wounded Drummer-Boy,’’ will remember the spirit and grace of the picture. Unlike Mr. Johnson’s quiet genre pictures, this was one of the most animated war-scenes that any of our artists had delineated, and the early impression made by the painting itself was not weakened when we saw a crayon-study for the picture, which is now on exhibition at Schaus’s."
Century Association 1875
Constitution and By-Laws. New York: Century Association, 1875, p. 70.
Conradt-Eberlin 1907
Conradt-Eberlin, Viggo. Catalogue of Paintings and Other Art Objects Belonging to the Century Association. 1907. Century Association Foundation Archives, New York. Handwritten list, no. 72.
Century Association 1931
Secretary of the Century Association. Board of Management and Monthly Meeting Minutes XVII (1931–1940). October 31, 1931. Century Association Foundation Archives, New York, p. 175.
Baur 1940
Baur, John I. H. An American Genre Painter: Eastman Johnson, 1824–1906. Brooklyn, NY: Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences, 1940. Exhibition catalogue (1939 Brooklyn Museum), pp. 35, 79, no. 406, as Drummer Boy.
Lay and Bolton 1943
Lay, Charles Downing, and Theodore Bolton. Works of Art Silver and Furniture Belonging to the Century Association. New York: Century Association, 1943, p. 25, as Drummer Boy.
Hills 1977
Hills, Patricia. The Genre Paintings of Eastman Johnson: The Sources and Development of His Style and Themes. New York: Garland Publishing, 1977, p. 81.
Mayor and Davis 1977
Mayor, A. Hyatt, and Mark Davis. American Art at the Century. New York: Century Association, 1977, pp. 24–25, 143.
Carbone and Hills 1999
Carbone, Teresa A., and Patricia Hills. Eastman Johnson: Painting America. Brooklyn, NY: Brooklyn Museum of Art, in association with Rizzoli International Publications, 1999. Exhibition catalogue (1999 Brooklyn Museum), pp. 58–59, no. 28, as The Wounded Drummer Boy.
Carbone 2000
Carbone, Theresa A. "Eastman Johnson, 1840–1858." American Art Review 12, no. 1 (January–February 2000), p. 157, illus.
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Keywords
Record last updated March 22, 2022. Please note that the information on this and all pages is periodically reviewed and subject to change.
Citation: Hills, Patricia, and Abigael MacGibeny. "The Wounded Drummer Boy, 1863 (Hills no. 40.0.3)." Eastman Johnson Catalogue Raisonné. www.eastmanjohnson.org/catalogue/entry.php?id=1092 (accessed on May 5, 2024).