art.wikisort.org - SculptureAlexander Hamilton is a marble bust portrait of Alexander Hamilton, done in the style of a Roman Senator, by the Italian sculptor Giuseppe Ceracchi.[1] Ceracchi also created many replicas, in both marble and plaster. The bust was later used as a model for sculptures and paintings.
Marble bust by Giuseppe Ceracchi
Alexander Hamilton |
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Artist | Giuseppe Ceracchi |
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Year | 1794 (1794) |
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Type | Sculpture |
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Medium | White marble |
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Subject | Alexander Hamilton |
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Dimensions | 63.5 cm × 35.6 cm × 30.5 cm (25.0 in × 14.0 in × 12.0 in) |
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History
Ceracchi created a terracotta model of Hamilton, from life, about 1791–92.[2] This was subsequently sent to Rome, where he created the marble version. As written to Hamilton in July 1792, Ceracchi was "impatient to receive the clay that I had the satisfaction of forming from your witty and significant physiognomy".[3] He returned to deliver the bust to Hamilton in 1794. He did not receive payment until later. On March 3, 1796, Hamilton wrote in his cash-book: "for this sum through delicacy paid upon cherachi’s draft for making my bust on his own importunity & as a favour to him $620"[4]
The Hamilton family kept the bust until 1896 when it was bequeathed to the New York Public Library along with the portrait painting of George Washington, The Constable-Hamilton Portrait, by Gilbert Stuart.[5] Both were sold together, as requested by the will, on November 30, 2005 to the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art for over $8 million.[2]
One of the original copies of the bust is now housed at Hamilton Grange National Memorial, in New York City. The original is displayed at the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas.[citation needed]
Description
Ceracchi portrayed Hamilton in the style of a Roman Senator, with wavy hair and bare-chested, wearing a ribbon of the Order of the Cincinnati over his right shoulder.[1][2]
Inscription
The original work is inscribed on the back in Latin:[5]
DE FACIE PHILADELPHIAE
EX ECTIPO FLORENCIAE
FACIEBAT JOS. CERACCHI
CIDDCCLXXXXIV |
This translates to "Executed in Philadelphia and copied in Florence, Executed by Joseph Ceracchi, 1794."[2]
Legacy
The painter John Trumbull used the bust as model for a series of 1804–1808 portraits of Hamilton.[6][7]
The first U.S. Postal Service stamp to honor Hamilton was an 1870 30-cent stamp using this bust as a model.[8]
In 1880, the bust owned by Hamilton's son, John C. Hamilton, was used as a model for the head of the granite statue by Carl Conrads.[9]
At the Hamilton Grange National Memorial, the National Park Service has installed a touch-screen display that features an avatar modeled after Ceracchi's bust.[10]
While Ceracchi (born on July 4, 1751) created busts for several founding fathers, his life did not end well. After returning to Europe, he first celebrated Napoleon with a bust, but then turned against him. After an unsuccessful plot, Napoleon had him guillotined at the Place de Grève on January 30, 1801.[9][11]
Gallery
References
- "Alexander Hamilton, (sculpture)". Inventory of American Sculpture, Smithsonian Institution Research Information System. Smithsonian American Art Museum.
- "Treasury's Hamilton Bust". U.S. Department of the Treasury.
- Dearinger, David Bernard (2004). "Giuseppe Ceracchi". Paintings and Sculpture in the Collection of the National Academy of Design: 1826–1925. Hudson Hills Press. pp. 90–91. ISBN 1-55595-029-9.
- Hamilton, Alexander (July 25, 1795). "From Alexander Hamilton to Robert Troup, 25 July 1795". National Archives. note 6.
- "Property from the New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations". Sotheby's. November 30, 2005. Archived from the original on August 7, 2016.
- Sizer, Theodore (1967). "Alexander Hamilton: Ceracchi Type". The Works of Colonel John Trumbull, Artist of the American Revolution. with the assistance of Caroline Rollins (Revised ed.). Yale University Press. pp. 37–8. ISBN 9780608112749.
- "Alexander Hamilton, (Replica) (painting)". Inventory of American Sculpture, Smithsonian Institution Research Information System. Smithsonian American Art Museum.
- "30-cent Hamilton". National Postal Museum.
- "The Hamilton Statue. Its Unveiling To-day – The Bust After Which It Was Modeled". The New York Times. November 22, 1880.
- "Hamilton Comes to Life (and Death) On-screen". National Park Service.
- Roscoe, Ingrid; Hardy, Emma; Sullivan, M.G. "Giuseppe Ceracchi". Online Database of the Biographical Dictionary of Sculptors in Britain 1660–1851.[permanent dead link]
External links
Alexander Hamilton |
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- Senior Officer of the United States Army, 1799–1800
- 1st Secretary of the Treasury, 1789–1795
- Delegate, Congress of the Confederation, 1782–1783, 1788–1789
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United States founding events |
- A Full Vindication of the Measures of Congress (1774)
- The Farmer Refuted (1775)
- Delegate, 1786 Annapolis Convention
- Delegate, 1787 Constitutional Convention
- Initiated, main author, The Federalist Papers
- New York Circular Letter
- Founding Father
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Secretary of the Treasury |
- First Bank of the United States
- Revenue Marine (U.S. Coast Guard)
- U.S. Customs Service
- Hamiltonian economic program
- Residence Act
- Funding Act of 1790
- Tariff of 1790
- Bank Bill of 1791
- Tariff of 1791
- Tariff of 1792
- Coinage Act of 1792
- Whiskey Rebellion
- Jay Treaty
- Reports
- "First Report on the Public Credit"
- "Second Report on Public Credit"
- "Report On Manufactures"
- "Report on a Plan for the Further Support of Public Credit"
- Society for Establishing Useful Manufactures
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Military career |
- New York Provincial Company of Artillery
- Washington's aide-de-camp
- In the Revolutionary War
- Battle of Harlem Heights
- White Plains
- Trenton
- Princeton
- Brandywine
- Germantown
- Monmouth
- Siege of Yorktown
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Other events |
- Founder, Federalist Party
- Founder, Bank of New York
- Bank of North America
- Advisor, George Washington's Farewell Address
- President General of the Society of the Cincinnati
- Founder, New-York Evening Post
- Hamilton College
- Hamilton–Reynolds affair
- Rutgers v. Waddington
- Relationship with slavery
- Burr–Hamilton duel
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Depictions | |
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Memorials |
- Boyhood home and museum
- Alexander Hamilton U.S. Custom House
- Alexander Hamilton Bridge
- Alexander Hamilton High School (Los Angeles)
- Fort Hamilton
- Hamilton Grange National Memorial
- Hamilton Hall (Columbia University)
- Hamilton Hall (Salem)
- Hamilton Heights, Manhattan
- Hamilton, Ohio
- Hamilton-Oneida Academy
- PS Alexander Hamilton
- Trinity Church Cemetery
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Popular culture |
- Hamilton (1917 play)
- Alexander Hamilton (1931 film)
- Liberty! (1997 documentary series)
- Liberty's Kids (2002 animated series)
- Alexander Hamilton (2004 book)
- John Adams (2008 miniseries)
- Hamilton (2015 musical, 2020 film)
- Washington (2020 miniseries)
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Related |
- Founders Online
- Age of Enlightenment
- American Enlightenment
- American Philosophical Society
- Liberty Hall (N.J.)
- New York Manumission Society
- "American System" economic plan
- American Revolution
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Family |
- Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton (wife)
- Philip Hamilton (oldest son)
- Angelica Hamilton (daughter)
- Alexander Hamilton Jr. (son)
- James Alexander Hamilton (son)
- John Church Hamilton (son)
- William S. Hamilton (son)
- Eliza Hamilton Holly (daughter)
- Philip Hamilton (youngest son)
- Schuyler Hamilton (grandson)
- Alexander Hamilton Jr. (grandson)
- Allan McLane Hamilton (grandson)
- Robert Ray Hamilton (great-grandson)
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Category
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