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Lot 1659

EASTMAN JOHNSON (AMERICAN, 1824-1906)

Portrait of Philip Carrigan Johnson, the artist’s father (1795-1859) (c. 1856)
oil on canvas
24 x 19cm

Provenance
Eastman Johnson estate/Mrs. Eastman Johnson, New York, 1906 (by bequest);
Ethel Eastman Johnson Conkling Holden, her daughter (by descent);
Olga Louise Gwendolyn Conkling, her daughter, by 1940 (by descent);
Private collection, UK (by descent)

Estimate: £600 - £800
Hammer price: £650
Bidding ended. Lot has been sold.

Literature
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), p. 69, no. 216, as Philip C. Johnson, Jr. [sic—incorrect];
Hills, Patricia, and Abigael MacGibeny, Eastman Johnson Catalogue Raisonné, no. 31.1.109

Footnote
Eastman Johnson (1824-1906) was one of the leading American artists of his time and a co-founder of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Having studied in The Hague in the 1850s, he was heavily influenced by the masters of the Dutch Golden Age of the 17th century and earned the moniker 'The American Rembrandt' in his lifetime, with their influence being particularly apparent in his use of light. With a style based in realism, Johnson is best known for his genre paintings, portraying scenes of ordinary life both in domestic settings, like The New Bonnet, and, in America's great outdoors, such as The Cranberry Harvest, Island of Nantucket, he also painted the Native American Ojibwe people, see Ojibwe Women, African-American subjects, see Negro Life in the South, and portraits of both everyday and prominent Americans, including American Presidents Benjamin Harrison and Grover Cleveland.  Johnson's works feature in the collections of some of the world's most prominent galleries and museums, including The MET, New York, The Smithsonian, and The National Gallery of Art, Washington.


The portrait offered for sale here is of Eastman Johnson's father, Philip Carrigan Johnson, Sr. (1795–1859), husband of Mary Kimball Chandler Johnson. After her death in 1855, he re-married in 1857 to Mary Washington James. He was father to eight children, including the artist Eastman Johnson.

Having being passed down through the artist's family to the present owner, this portrait, along with the two other Eastman Johnson works in the sale, lots 1658 (Portrait of the artist's daughter) and 1844 (Canal Scene), has impeccable provenance and Bellmans is delighted to bring them to auction for the very first time.

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