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

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© 2022 Christie's Images Limited
Washington Crossing the Delaware (Emanuel Leutze with the assistance of Johnson), 1851 (Hills no. 5.0.2). The original painting copied by Johnson, for the engraving: Washington Crossing the Delaware by Emanuel Leutze, 1851
The original painting copied by Johnson, for the engraving: Washington Crossing the Delaware by Emanuel Leutze, 1851
Image courtesy the Metropolitan Museum of Art
Washington Crossing the Delaware (Emanuel Leutze with the assistance of Johnson), 1851 (Hills no. 5.0.2). Goupil Stockbook no. 1, 1846-1861, p. 36 (part 1)
Goupil Stockbook no. 1, 1846-1861, p. 36 (part 1)
Photo: Getty Research Institute, Special Collections
Washington Crossing the Delaware (Emanuel Leutze with the assistance of Johnson), 1851 (Hills no. 5.0.2). Goupil Stockbook no. 1, 1846-1861, p. 36 (part 2)
Goupil Stockbook no. 1, 1846-1861, p. 36 (part 2)
Photo: Getty Research Institute, Special Collections
Washington Crossing the Delaware (Emanuel Leutze with the assistance of Johnson), 1851 (Hills no. 5.0.2). Smaller version made by Leutze of his Washington Crossing the Delaware, 1851, not for the engraving
Smaller version made by Leutze of his Washington Crossing the Delaware, 1851, not for the engraving
Photo: Courtesy of Sotheby’s, Inc. © 2020
Washington Crossing the Delaware (Emanuel Leutze with the assistance of Johnson), 1851 (Hills no. 5.0.2). Approximate location of General George Washington's crossing of the Delaware River on December 25, 1776
Approximate location of General George Washington's crossing of the Delaware River on December 25, 1776
Photo: Patricia Hills, 2020
05.0 Euro Copies after Leutze

When Johnson went to Düsseldorf, it was to study with artists connected to the Düsseldorf Academy; however, the most important influence on him was the German-American history painter Emanuel Leutze (1816–1868), whose studio Johnson entered in early 1851.  

One of Leutze’s most important works was Washington Crossing the Delaware—a scene of the American general crossing the Delaware River on Christmas night of 1776 to execute a surprise attack on Hessian troops (allied with British troops) garrisoned in the Trenton, New Jersey area. Leutze did two versions. The first was partially destroyed by fire; the second was made in his studio as a substitute until insurance claims released the first version. This second version now resides at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York [See John K. Howat, Bulletin of the Metropolitan Museum of Art 26, no. 7 (March 1968)]. —PH

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Hills no. 5.0.2
Washington Crossing the Delaware (Emanuel Leutze with the assistance of Johnson)
Alternate title: Washington popant la Delaware
1851
Oil on canvas
40 1/2 x 68 in. (102.9 x 172.7 cm)
Signed lower right: E. Leutze
Private collection
Description / Remarks

Hills, 2022: Discussion among scholars has been necessary to assign Emanuel Leutze authorship of the oil painting Washington Crossing the Delaware, which, as of April 2022, has been on loan to the Minnesota Marine Art Museum in Winona, Minnesota, hereinafter referred to as the “Winona version.” The first large-size Leutze version, painted in 1850, was partially damaged by a fire in Leutze’s studio on November 5, 1850. This is referred to as the “Bremen version.” This work, which had been on view at a Bremen art gallery, was destroyed during a bombing raid by the Allies in 1945. An intermediate unfinished version, private collection, is referred to as the “Connecticut version.” The second large version at the Metropolitan Museum of Art is referred to as the “Metropolitan Museum version.” The engraving, issued in 1853, is referred to as the “engraving.”

Backstory: Leutze created the Bremen version of Washington Crossing the Delaware with the intention of selling it to Goupil & Cie, a French auction house and merchant of European paintings. Goupil opened Goupil, Vibert, and Co. in New York in 1848 and intended to expand their market of contemporary art through exposure in exhibitions as well as creating public awareness of such works through the sale and distribution of engravings. It seems that Leutze was eager to make the repairs on the Bremen version, but insurance claims held up the work. One can speculate that under pressure from Goupil, Leutze began another version [see Pinot 2017 and Stehle 1964].

Evidence from Johnson’s correspondence: The best evidence of the chronology of events comes from Eastman Johnson’s correspondence. On January 16, 1851, he wrote to the American Art-Union:

I have now recently gone with Mr. Leutze & am painting under his instruction in an immense atelier which he rented for his big picture, with two others beside himself, excellent artists, & both engaged on large works, forming an atmosphere & an aspect of art not less delightful than it is improving…Leutze is every day expecting his new canvas & in haste to commence again his large picture. In the meantime is [sic] engaged on a small one [transcriber’s remark: “the same” inserted above] which is progressing delightfully, with sundry other things in hand. The injured picture is now on exhibition at Cologne… [Johnson, Eastman 1851a].

This statement indicates that Leutze had started a small painting—likely this version. This Winona version, with its focus on the details of the central figures’ gestures, physiognomies, and costumes, as well as the red outlining of forms for the rest of the canvas, would have served as a cartoon, or preliminary design, for the large second work he wanted to commence. In the Connecticut version there are some elements of the Bremen version but the details are more aligned with the Metropolitan Museum version. (I am grateful to Graham C. Boettcher, PhD, The R. Hugh Daniel Director of the Birmingham Museum of Art, for this observation, and to Jochen Weirich for sharing his knowledge [see the Johnson chapter in Weirich 2012; also of interest is Groseclose 1975].)

To his family friend Charlotte Child, Johnson wrote on March 25, 1851, about Leutze’s progress and his own involvement in the endeavor:

Since the first of January I’ve been with Leutze—our studio is a large hall where six of us paint with convenience, &  three on large pictures. The chief, is of Leutze’s of ‘Washington Crossing the Delaware’ 20 feet by 16, figures size of life—It is already perhaps two thirds finished, & I am making a copy on a reduced scale from which an engraving is to be made— It is sold to the owners of the International A. Union of N. York, & will be exhibited thro. the States in the fall—With six in a room, a cask of the best ‘Laurish Beer’ always behind the great canvass & a disposition to be jolly you may be sure it does not want for animation—Leutze is an energetic and talkative fellow, generous and full of spirits…” [Johnson, Eastman 1851b]. [The International Art Union of New York was the agency for the distribution of prints through which Goupil worked and was set up to compete with the American Art-Union.]

On July 19, 1851, Johnson wrote to Andrew Warner of the American Art-Union: “My time the past winter has been mostly occupied in copying Leutze’s Washington. These were painted while in his studio. You are probably well informed in all in reference to this picture, & also as to Mr. Leutze’s intention of being now in America as soon as possible…” [Johnson, Eastman 1851c]. According to Stehle 1964, p. 275, the Düsseldorfer Journal und Kreisblatt declared the replica finished on July 15, 1851. 

Evidence from Goupil:  On July 26, 1851, Goupil stock book no. 1 in Paris recorded two entries under the column “Dates des Entrees. ” Entry no. 308, “Washington popant la Delaware.” Price sold: 32,000 francs. Entry 321 is recorded as “Copie d’ap. Leutze.” Price sold: 3000 francs, “Vendu à New York [illegible] Nov. 1858. [date sold]." 

More than fifty years after the painting was made, art writer William Walton—no doubt from conversations with Johnson’s widow—narrates that at the reception for the painting on May 11, 1851, the Prince and Princess of Prussia “wished to purchase the small copy of the picture which Johnson had painted, but which, under the terms of the contract made for the disposal of the original, could not be sold” [Walton 1906, p. 267].

Visual Evidence: I have studied closely the details of the three works—the Metropolitan version, the Winona version, and the Connecticut version—and the engraving and have written about my findings in my dissertation. I then, in 1973, came to the conclusion that the Winona version was the copy that the engraver used and that it could be called Johnson’s work, even though signed by Leutze and likely that the finishing details may have been done by Leutze. Details of the painting seemed to match details seen on the print—particularly the shapes of ice floating in the Delaware River, the swirl of water at the front of the bow where the oarsman has thrust his oar, and the lack of a fob in both the Winona version and the engraving [see Hills 1977, pp. 34–44].

Exhibition of the Metropolitan Version: Literary World 1851, p. 175, reported: “Leutze’s painting of Washington crossing the Delaware has been purchased by Messrs. Goupil & Co., who intend exhibiting it throughout the Unites States, and also will have it engraved in line in a style fully equal to their best publications.”

The Metropolitan version was indeed exceedingly popular when exhibited; noted collector Marshall O. Roberts soon owned the painting. The engraver’s copy also was widely exhibited and eventually sold in 1858. The engraving was made by Paul Girardet, but not distributed until 1853. Again, the engraving was immensely popular. The appeal of the image no doubt resonated with Americans needing a symbolic icon of American unity; Washington was, after all, called the Father of the Country.

Johnson’s apprenticeship with Leutze: It is indisputable that Johnson learned considerably by working on the copy for the engraver under Leutze’s supervision. Leutze’s studio seems to have been organized much in the style of the European ateliers, like that of Rubens, in which the master would outline a composition or provide a cartoon for his assistants. The assistants would paint in the body of the picture, and Rubens would make the finishing touches and sign the paintings. Worthington Whittredge bragged about painting large swaths of the sky during an all-night session along with other studio assistants for the large (Metropolitan Museum) version [see Baur 1942].

Moreover, I believe that at this point—winter and spring of 1851—Johnson did not yet have the skill to create such a massive, multifigured painting without considerable oversight from Leutze. Although skilled as a portrait draftsman, he was still learning to be a painter. He had made a copy of Leutze’s painting The Vigil, which strikes us today as very amateurish, and had done a few genre interiors and portraits [see EJCR Themes 1.0–3.3]. Those works which he chose to bring back to the U.S. show a talented but beginning painter.  

Historical considerations: The 1850s was a period of transition for European and American artists.  With the advent of photography and its possibilities, artists either consciously or not began to paint the light on objects rather than the objects; consider John Singer Sargent’s paintings. By the 1870s avant-garde writers showered admiration on those artists who went a step further and focused primarily on the act of painting with spontaneous brushstrokes favored—not light, not objects.   

When Leutze left Düsseldorf for the U.S. in the latter half of 1851, Johnson also left; he settled in The Hague, where he had the opportunity to study Rembrandt and the Old Masters and learned to situate his figures in darkened interiors in order to emphasize the qualities of light/dark contrasts. However, he soon gravitated to presenting figures in light as they emerge from darkened interiors (effects which had been mastered by William Sydney Mount). Eventually Johnson located his figures in bright sunlight or in the dappled light of tree-shaded outdoor settings. His career represents an artist bridging the old styles toward the new.

Ideal subjects for engravers:  Moreover, high quality engravers require pictures that show objects and details, not the play of light nor the showcasing of virtuoso brushwork. Leutze’s style of exacting realism with the obliteration of the brush was suitable to engravings. Johnson did not take the path of Leutze; his work would be more compatible with lithography [see Prints after Works by Johnson].

Conclusion: Hence, for the Winona version, a more accurate attribution would be: “Emanuel Leutze with the assistance of Eastman Johnson.” And in my opinion the Winona version was the copy used by Goupil’s engraver.

Postscript to Conclusion:  Many versions exist of Washington Crossing the Delaware—mostly period versions made from the original engraving and subsequent engravings. The image of Washington as decisive hero was the most popular history painting of its time, especially in the North, where strong sentiment urged compromise and the unity of all the States.

MacGibeny, 2022: A letter from A. C. Thieme in the Archives of American Art recounts the experience of her grandfather, who stayed at the same hotel as Johnson in The Hague in 1852. Her grandfather asked Johnson about his sketchbook, which stood on the mantel; Johnson replied that he had been collecting models of faces for a very large painting of the crossing of the Delaware. Generating original imagery in this way after participating in the creation of Leutze's Washington Crossing the Delaware would suggest that Johnson had been planning his own monumental version of the scene.

Provenance
Goupil, Vibert and Company, New York, until November 1858
Alexander White, Chicago, by 1859
[Henry Leeds and Co., New York, May 22, 1863, as Washington Crossing the Delaware, by E. Leutze, "being the second and smaller picture of this subject, and the one from which the fine engraving was taken in 1856"]
William H. Webb, New York, by 1876
[H. D. Miner's Art Gallery, New York, March 29–30, 1876 (First Evening's Sale), A Very Fine Assemblage of Works of Art; Comprising the Private Gallery of Paintings, Statuary, Bronzes and Art Library of Mr. Wm. H. Webb, no. 65, as Washington Crossing the Delaware by E. Leutze, "Guaranteed the Original from which the Engraving was taken."]
Stephen Rosson Lesher, New York, likely March 29, 1876 (by purchase)
Arthur Lawrence Lesher, New York, his son, 1895 (by descent)
Marion Alice Isaacs (Mrs. Arthur Lawrence) Lesher, New York, 1931 (by descent)
Marion Alice Lesher (Mrs. Francis Dewey) Everett, New York, her daughter, 1946 (by descent)
Francis Dewey Everett, Jr., New York, her son, 1953–1967 (by descent)
Ambassador and Mrs. J. William Middendorf, II, New York, 1967–1973 (by purchase)
[Sotheby's, October 25, 1973, American Painting, lot 13, From the Collection of Ambassador and Mrs. J. William Middendorf II (as Washington Crossing the Delaware, by Eastman Johnson, N.A., after Emanuel Leutze, With signature E. Leutze)]
Duane Hillmer, Omaha, Nebraska, October 25, 1973 (by purchase)
[Sotheby's, April 20, 1979, Sale 4236, lot 28 (as Washington Crossing the Delaware, by Eastman Johnson after Emanuel Leutze)]
Manoogian Collection, Taylor, Michigan, 1979–2014 (by purchase), on loan to the White House, Washington, D.C., 1979–2014
Private collection, 2014 (by purchase)
[Christie's, United States, May 5, 2022, Sale 20730, 20th Century Evening Sale, lot 30C (as Washington Crossing the Delaware by Emanuel Leutze with the assistance of Johnson)]
Anonymous buyer, May 5, 2022 (by purchase)
Exhibitions
1853 Crystal Palace
New York Exhibition of the Industry of All Nations, The Crystal Palace, New York, July 14, 1853–1854, no. 616, as Washington Crossing the Delaware, by E. Leutze.
1854 PAFA
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, Thirty-First Annual Exhibition, May 1854, no. 48, as Washington Crossing the Delaware, by E. Leutze, owner Goupil & Co, for sale.
1855 Goupil & Cie.
Goupil & Cie, New York, 1855, [possibly].
1859 Chicago Exhibition of the Fine Arts
Chicago Exhibition of the Fine Arts, Burch's Building, Chicago, First Exhibition of Statuary, Paintings, Etc., opened May 9, 1859, no. 17, as Washington Crossing the Delaware, by Leutze, proprietor Alex. White.
1895a Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, American Paintings, 1895, no. 123, as Washington Crossing the Delaware, "Replica of the large painting now in the possession of the Marshall O. Roberts' Estate," owner Mr. S. R. Lesher, New York.
1946 Century Association
Century Association, New York, Exhibition of Work by Emanuel Leutze, 1946, no. 22, as Washington Crossing the Delaware by Leutze, owner Mrs. Dewey Everett.
1951 Union League Club of New York
The Union League Club of New York, New York, 1951–67.
1967 Baltimore Museum
Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore, American Paintings and Historical Prints from the Middendorf Collection, July 9–September 24, 1967, no. 26, illus., as Washington Crossing the Delaware by Leutze. Traveled to: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, October 4–November 26, 1967.
1972 White House
White House, Washington, D.C., [On long-term loan], 1972–73, as Washington Crossing the Delaware by Leutze.
1979 White House
White House, Washington, D.C., [On long-term loan], 1979–2014, as Washington Crossing the Delaware by Eastman Johnson after Leutze.
2015 Minnesota Marine Art Museum
Minnesota Marine Art Museum, Winona, Minnesota, [On long-term loan], 2015–22, as Washington Crossing the Delaware by Emanuel Leutze.
References
Goupil Stock Books 1846–61
Goupil Stock Books no. 1, 1846–1861. Los Angeles. Getty Research Institute, Special Collections, p. 36, no. 321.
Literary World 1851
"Fine Art Gossip." The Literary World (New York) 8, no. 213 (March 1, 1851), p. 175.
Johnson, Eastman 1851a
Eastman Johnson letter to Andrew Warner (American Art-Union), January 16, 1851, BV American Art-Union—Letters from Artists, New-York Historical Society.
Johnson, Eastman 1851b
Eastman Johnson letter to Charlotte Child, March 25, 1851, To his family friend Charlotte Child, Johnson wrote on March 25, 1851, about Leutze’s progress and his own involvement in the endeavor: “Since the first of January I’ve been with Leutze—Our studio is a large hall where six of us paint with convenience, & three on large pictures. The chief, is Leutze’s of 'Washington Crossing the Delaware'…I am making a copy on a reduced scale from which an engraving is to be made…," quoted in Baur 1940 and Selection of Artist’s Letters 1999.
Johnson, Eastman 1851c
Eastman Johnson letter to Andrew Warner (American Art-Union), July 19, 1851, BV American Art-Union—Letters from Artists, New-York Historical Society.
Evening Post 1853
"The Paintings in the Crystal Palace." The Evening Post (New York), September 13, 1853, p. 2: "Leutze, his small copy of 'Washington Crossing the Delaware.'".
New York Herald 1853
"The World of Art. Gallery of Paintings at the Crystal Palace." New York Herald, September 18, 1853, n.p. (6): “…the visitor will look in vain for anything by the men who have the right to consider themselves as the representatives of American art. We said there were exceptions to the rule. Leutze’s small reproduction of his large picture of ‘Washington Crossing the Delaware’ is there; and though perfectly accurate as a copy, only teaches us to regret the more that the original is absent. For effect, the two cannot compare. The stupendous masses of ice which strike horror into the beholder of the large picture, are insignificant in the small version. Nor does the figure of Washington stand out in such noble relief in the latter as in the former. We leave it to artists to assign a reason for the fact.”.
The Plough, the Loom, and the Anvil 1853
"The Great Exhibition." The Plough, the Loom, and the Anvil (New York) 6, no. 5 (November 1853), p. 303 [discussion of Crystal Palace exhibition no. 616, Washington Crossing the Delaware]: "This is a magnificent painting, particularly the figure of Washington. There is more presence in it, perhaps, than the truth would warrant, regarding it as a portrait, but the whole picture is very fine. It is just engraved in excellent style by Williams, Stevens & Williams, of Broadway."
Crystal Palace 1853a
New York Exhibition of the Industry of all Nations. Official Catalogue of the New York Exhibition of the Industry of all Nations (First Revised Edition). New York: George P. Putnam & Co., 1853. Exhibition catalogue, p. 20, no. 616, as Washington Crossing the Delaware by E. Leutze, United States, "A reduced copy of the original picture, painted by the author. It is too well known through the engravings of Goupil, as well as per se, to require elucidation".
Crystal Palace 1853b
New York Exhibition of the Industry of all Nations. Official Catalogue of the New York Exhibition of the Industry of all Nations (First Revised Edition). New York: G. P. Putnam & Co., 1853. Exhibition catalogue, p. 22, no. 616, as Washington Crossing the Delaware, by E. Leutze, United States).
PAFA 1854
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Catalogue of the Thirty-first Annual Exhibition of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Philadelphia: T. K. and P. G. Collins, 1854. Exhibition catalogue, p. 5, no. 48, as Washington Crossing the Delaware, by E. Leutze, owner Goupil & Co, for sale.
Chicago Exhibition of the Fine Arts 1859
Catalogue of the First Exhibition of Statuary, Paintings, Etc. Chicago: Press & Tribune Print, 1859. Exhibition catalogue, p. 4, no. 17, as Washington Crossing the Delaware, by Leutze, proprietor Alex. White.
Church Record 1859
"Fine Arts." The Church Record (Chicago) 2, no. 12 (March 1, 1859), p. 188: "One of [Mr. E. Leutze's] most popular pictures, 'Washington Crossing the Delaware,' is in the possession of Alex. White, Esq, of this city."
New-York Daily Tribune 1863
New-York Daily Tribune, May 23, 1863, p. 4: "Washington Crossing the Delaware, by E. Leutze, being the second and smaller picture painted by him on this subject, and the one from which the engraving was taken, sold for $1,100, and was knocked down to Wm. H. Webb…"
Evening Post 1863a
Advertisement by Henry H. Leeds, Auctioneer. The Evening Post (New York), May 16, 1863, p. 4: “Also, several rare examples by American artists, including WASHINGTON CROSSING THE DELAWARE by E. LEUTZE, being the second and smaller picture of this subject, and the one from which the fine engraving was taken in 1856.”.
Miner's Art Galleries 1876
Catalogue of a Very Fine Assemblage of Works of Art; Comprising the Private Gallery of Paintings, Statuary, Bronzes and Art Library of Mr. Wm. H. Webb. New York: Miner's Art Galleries, March 29–30, 1876. Sale catalogue, p. 22, no. 65, as by E. Leutze, "Guaranteed the Original from which the Engraving was taken. Canvas 67 x 40".
Metropolitan Museum of Art 1895
Retrospective Loan Collection of Paintings by American Artists. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1895. Exhibition catalogue, p. 39, as Washington Crossing the Delaware, owner Mr. S. R. Lesher.
French 1906
French, Edgar. "An American Portrait Painter of Three Historical Epochs." World's Work 13, no. 2 (December 1906), p. 8323.
Walton 1906
Walton, William. "Eastman Johnson, Painter." Scribner's Magazine 40 (September 1906), p. 267.
Cigrand 1918
Cigrand, Bernard J. "Famous Painting Shows Washington Crossing the Rhine, Not the Delaware." The Washington Post, February 17, 1918.
Philadelphia Inquirer 1932
"Rare Canvas on Sale." The Philadelphia Inquirer, February 9, 1932, p. 3: "Washington Crossing the Delaware—almost an exact duplicate of the picture at the Metropolitan Museum and by the same artist [Leutze]."
Baur 1942
Baur, John I. H. "The Autobiography of Worthington Whittredge." Brooklyn Museum Journal (1942), pp. 22f.
Century Association 1946
Exhibition of Work by Emanuel Leutze. New York: The Century Association, 1946. Exhibition catalogue, n.p., no. 22, as Washington Crossing the Delaware by Leutze, owner Mrs. Dewey Everett.
Hutton 1959
Hutton, Ann H. Portrait of Patriotism: Washington Crossing the Delaware. Philadelphia: Chilton Book Co., 1959, discusses Leutze and his creation of Washington Crossing the Delaware.
Stehle 1964
Stehle, Raymond L. "Washington Crossing the Delaware." Pennsylvania History 31 (July 1964), pp. 291–293, discusses this version of the painting and provides an extensive bibliography.
Metropolitan Museum of Art 1967
American Paintings & Historical Prints from the Middendorf Collection. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1967, pp. 38–39, no. 26, illus., as Washington Crossing the Delaware by Leutze.
Groseclose 1975
Groseclose, Barbara S. Emanuel Leutze, 1816–1868: Freedom Is the Only King. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1975. Exhibition catalogue.
Stehle 1976
Stehle, Raymond L. The Life and Works of Emanuel Leutze. Washington, DC: [publisher unknown], 1976, pp. 27–28, 44–48.
U.S. Postal Service 1976
24-cent Washington Crossing the Delaware, sheet of 5. May 29, 1976. U.S. Postal Service, Reproduced as sheet of postage stamps captioned "Washington Crossing the Delaware/From a Painting by Emanuel Leutze/Eastman Johnson".
Hills 1977
Hills, Patricia. The Genre Paintings of Eastman Johnson: The Sources and Development of His Style and Themes. New York: Garland Publishing, 1977, "Johnson's Work on Leutze's Washington Crossing the Delaware".
Spassky 1985
Spassky, Natalie, with Linda Bantel, Doreen Bolger Burke, Meg Perlman, and Amy L. Walsh. American Paintings in The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Vol. 2, A Catalogue of Works by Artists Born between 1816 and 1845. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1985, pp. 22-23, as Washington Crossing the Delaware, Eastman Johnson in collaboration with Leutze.
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), p. 18, fig. 6 (based on earlier scholarship by Hills, inaccurately cited as Washington Crossing the Delaware, small-scale replica after Emanuel Leutze, 1851).
Selection of Artist's Letters 1999
"A Selection of the Artist's Letters." In Eastman Johnson: Painting America, by Teresa A. Carbone and Patricia Hills. Brooklyn, NY: Brooklyn Museum of Art, in association with Rizzoli International Publications, 1999. Exhibition catalogue.
Wierich 2011
Wierich, Jochen. "Against the Current: Washington Crossing the Delaware as the End of History Painting." In The Düsseldorf School of Painting and Its International Influence, 1819–1918, edited by Bettina Baurgärtel. Petersberg: Michael Imhof Verlag, 2011, p. 123.
Wierich 2012
Wierich, Jochen. Grand Themes: Emanuel Leutze, Washington Crossing the Delaware, and American History Painting. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2012.
Pinot 2017
Pinot, Agnes. "The Perils and Perks of Trading Art Overseas: Goupil’s New York Branch." Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide 16, no. 1 (Spring 2017).
enlarge
Photo: American Antiquarian Society
Washington Crossing the Delaware [engraved by Paul Girardet; published by Goupil & Co.]
1853
Engraving and etching
Image and text: 24 7/16 x 39 in. (62 x 99 cm)
Sheet: 27 9/16 x 42 1/2 in. (70 x 108 cm)
Along lower edge of image, left: PAINTED BY E. LEUTZE; center: Entered according to act of Congress in the year 1853 by M. Knoedler, in the clerk's office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York.; right: ENGRAVED BY PAUL GIRARDET. Lower center: WASHINGTON CROSSING THE DELAWARE/NEW-YORK_Published by GOUPIL & Co./Subscription Copy [inscribed in pencil]; lower left: Berlin_Verlag von Goupil & Cie.; lower right: Paris_Imprimé & Publié par Goupil & Cie.; Goupil et Cie blind stamp: 180 [inscribed in ink]
American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Massachusetts (445436)

Also owned by: Library of Congress (2020633689); Prints Division, New York Public Library

See all Prints after Works by Johnson.

Record last updated September 8, 2022. Please note that the information on this and all pages is periodically reviewed and subject to change.
Citation: Hills, Patricia, and Abigael MacGibeny. "Washington Crossing the Delaware (Emanuel Leutze with the assistance of Johnson), 1851 (Hills no. 5.0.2)." Eastman Johnson Catalogue Raisonné. www.eastmanjohnson.org/catalogue/entry.php?id=1711 (accessed on April 24, 2024).