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

Catalogue Entry

enlarge
Photo: Courtesy of Sotheby’s, Inc. © 2021
Mount Vernon in 1857, 1858 (Hills no. 6.0.2). Black & white
Black & white
Image Courtesy of the Frick Art Reference Library
06.0 Mount Vernon, Virginia and Washington, D.C.

During the summer months of 1857 Johnson visited the George Washington homestead at Mount Vernon, Virginia, with his friend Louis Mignot. Johnson painted one or two paintings, but returned the following summer to paint several more. During the 1850s the building and its grounds had fallen into disrepair. A new veneration of Washington, spurred on by growing sectional political conflicts between North and South, led to the formation of a committee of women to restore the site. They formed the Mount Vernon Ladies’ Association of the Union. The painter Thomas Rossiter brought attention to the situation by writing a plea in The Crayon (September 1858):

The nation has permitted his tomb to crumble, the storms to despoil his mansion, the weeds to grow over his footsteps and his door-sill, with an effort to preserve the sacred domain. At last, the women of the land—God bless them! Having waited and hoped in vain for a recognition of the sanctity of Mount Vernon, moved with feminine zeal and loyalty to the noble dead, have combined, organized and purchased the estate.

[Adapted from Hills, The Genre Painting of Eastman Johnson, pp. 54–55]. —PH

View all works in this theme »

Hills no. 6.0.2
1907 Sale no. 34
Mount Vernon in 1857
Alternate titles: Mt. Vernon in 1857; View at Mount Vernon; View at the Fields of Mount Vernon
1858
Oil on board
12 1/2 x 20 in. (31.8 x 50.8 cm)
Initialed and dated lower right: EJ; lower left: 1858.
Description / Remarks

Hills, 2022: Although John I. H. Baur owned and annotated a copy of the catalogue of Johnson's 1907 Estate Sale, he did not include this work in his own 1940 catalogue listing; he must have obtained it after publication.

Description in Mount Vernon Ladies' Association catalogue entry for Kitchen at Mount Vernon, 2017: "The study of the gateway [this painting], long believed to be a view of the porter’s lodges erected by Bushrod Washington at the west gate entrance to the estate, and the tomb scene [Van Ness Mausoleum in Washington, D.C., now located] remain unlocated. Johnson scholar Pat Hills has traced the gateway and tomb studies to a sale at the Coleman Auction Rooms, New York (12 December 1939, sale number 2173), and the descriptions from the 1907 American Art Association catalogue clearly correspond with the images for these two paintings. However, the images match neither recognizable spaces today nor historic images of the tomb and porter’s gate at Mount Vernon, raising the question whether Mrs. Johnson [in her letter; see References] misremembered the origin or locale of these two studies. More research remains to be done on these additional scenes of Mount Vernon and their connection to Johnson's visit in 1857." (Amy Hudson Henderson)

1907 Estate Sale info
No. 34: "This is a study of a broad, grass-grown road at the back of the Mount Vernon mansion, made before the modern improvements were undertaken. On the left is a tall gateway at the corner of a field, and on the right, beyond a characteristic Virginia rail fence, is seen a field of ripe Indian corn, with two buildings in sunlight under great overhanging trees, one of which rises out of the picture. A few clouds drift low in the simple summer sky, and the landscape is in a strong sunlight effect."
"Signed at the lower right, E. J.
Height, 12 ½ inches; length, 19 ½ inches"
[Annotation: “37.50”]
Provenance
Eastman Johnson estate/Mrs. Eastman Johnson, New York, 1906 (by bequest)
[The artist's estate sale, American Art Association, New York, February 26–27, 1907, no. 34 (as Mount Vernon in 1857)]
Ehrich Galleries, New York, by 1936
Mrs. Montgomery Murray, Hewlett, Long Island, New York, by 1939
[Coleman Auction Rooms, New York, December 9, 1939, Sale 2173]
Private collection, New Hyde Park, New York, by 1979 (as View at the Fields of Mount Vernon; same private collection as Washington's Tomb at Mount Vernon)
Private collection, by November 2020 (by descent)
[Sotheby's, October 6, 2021, Sale 10751, lot 21 (as Mount Vernon in 1857)]
Mount Vernon Ladies' Association, Mount Vernon, Virginia, October 6, 2021 (by purchase)
Exhibitions
1907a Century Association
Century Association, New York, Memorial Exhibition of Eastman Johnson, February 9–13, 1907, as Mt. Vernon in 1857.
References
Johnson, Elizabeth 1907
Elizabeth Johnson letter to the Regents of the Smithsonian Institution, December 1, 1907, Richard Rathburn Letters, 1906–10, Archives of American Art, frames 851–56, reel 2227. The letter includes the handwritten annotation "1906.", "I have a series of four oil paintings of Mt. Vernon, its exterior painted in 1857, and one of the Tomb of Washington…The Tomb had not then been rebuilt I think in 1857…They are absolutely true to nature to the place, that is Mt. Vernon."
AAA 1907b
Catalogue of Finished Pictures, Studies, and Drawings by the Late Eastman Johnson, N.A. New York: American Art Association, February 1907. Sale catalogue, n.p., no. 34, as Mount Vernon in 1857.
loading
Record last updated May 31, 2022. Please note that the information on this and all pages is periodically reviewed and subject to change.
Citation: Hills, Patricia, and Abigael MacGibeny. "Mount Vernon in 1857, 1858 (Hills no. 6.0.2)." Eastman Johnson Catalogue Raisonné. www.eastmanjohnson.org/catalogue/entry.php?id=49 (accessed on April 25, 2024).