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

Catalogue Entry

enlarge
Photo: Courtesy of Brunk Auctions, Asheville, North Carolina
08.0 Negro Life at the South, 1859

Although Johnson had exhibited works sent from Europe at the National Academy of Design in the early 1850s, it was his Negro Life at the South that established his reputation as the leading genre painter and assured his election as an Associate Academician, an honor that was invaluable in securing an artist’s fortune. To midcentury white America, the general dilapidation of the slave quarters was picturesque, and the small anecdotal touches were delightful. Today we may be ambivalent in our approach to Negro Life, or at least troubled by the simplistic view of Blacks in stereotypical activities: playing banjoes, shuffling to music, courting idly, and fondling children. However, more issues come to light upon close examination of the painting: What is the purpose/effect of the white woman stepping through the door at the right; what is the effect of the Black woman leaning out the window holding her baby; what about the individualistic renderings of the Black adults? Such questions need to be explored [See Hills 1974; Davis 1991; Hills 1999]. 

This painting and its variations have been placed in a separate category from Black Groups because of its historic significance as Johnson’s chef-d’oeuvre. —PH

View all works in this theme »

Hills no. 8.0.5
Confidence and Admiration
1859
Oil on canvas
14 x 12 in. (35.6 x 30.5 cm)
Signed and dated lower left: E. Johnson./1859.
Description / Remarks

Hills, 2021: Johnson made two paintings that focus on a banjo player and young admiring boy, based on the same figures in Negro Life at the South.

Sotheby's sale catalogue, 1971: "A young man wearing a black felt hat, seated on a step ladder beneath an alcove, plucking at a banjo as a young boy looks on."

 

Labels
Label on verso: NATIONAL COLLECTION OF FINE ARTS/SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION. 9 & G STS., WASHINGTON, D.C./ACCESSION NO. TL.43.1971/ARTIST EASTMAN JOHNSON/TITLE "Banjo Player"/Possible Purchase from Mr. Stuart Ayers
Provenance
Possibly Silas C. Evans, by 1864
[Possibly Samuel P. Avery, New York, March 14–15, 1877, Association Hall (Y. M. C. A.), The Private Collection of Fine Oil Paintings, &c. by American and Foreign Artists, the Property of Mr. Silas C. Evans, no. 134 (as Confidence and Admiration)]
Possibly Riker, March 14 or 15, 1877 (by purchase)
Stuart Ayers, by 1971 (as Banjo Player)
[Parke-Bernet Galleries, New York, October 27–28, 1971, Sale 3255, lot 101 (as Confidence and Admiration)]
Israel Sack, Inc., New York, November 1971
William N. Banks, Newnan, Georgia, early 1970s (by purchase)
[Brunk Auctions, Asheville, North Carolina, September 12, 2020, Single Owner Auction—The Estate of William N. Banks, Jr.—Newnan, Georgia, lot 96 (as Confidence and Admiration)]
Questroyal Fine Art, LLC, New York
Collection of J. Jeffrey and Ann Marie Fox (by purchase)
Exhibitions
1864 Brooklyn Art Association
Brooklyn Art Association, Brooklyn, New York, May 12–14, 1864, no. 115, [possibly, as Confidence and Admiration].
1984 MIT Museum
MIT Museum, Compton Gallery, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Ring the Banjar!: The Banjo in America from Folklore to Factory, April 12–September 29, 1984.
References
Samuel P. Avery 1877
Catalogue of the Private Collection of Fine Oil Paintings—By American and Foreign Artists, the Property of Mr. Silas C. Evans. New York: Samuel P. Avery, March 14–15, 1877. Sale catalogue, p. 24, no. 134 [possibly, as Confidence and Admiration], handwritten notations: "450-" and "Riker".
Related work
loading
loading
Keywords
Record last updated July 28, 2021. Please note that the information on this and all pages is periodically reviewed and subject to change.
Citation: Hills, Patricia, and Abigael MacGibeny. "Confidence and Admiration, 1859 (Hills no. 8.0.5)." Eastman Johnson Catalogue Raisonné. www.eastmanjohnson.org/catalogue/entry.php?id=77 (accessed on April 19, 2024).