AMMI PHILLIPS (1788-1865)
AMMI PHILLIPS (1788-1865)
AMMI PHILLIPS (1788-1865)
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AMMI PHILLIPS (1788-1865)

ELNATHAN HAXTUN

Details
AMMI PHILLIPS (1788-1865)
ELNATHAN HAXTUN
inscribed ELNATHAN HAXTUN AGED 49 YE'S. (on reverse)
oil on canvas
33 ½ x 28 in.
Painted circa 1844-45
Provenance
Elnathan Haxtun (1795-1862), Beekman, New York, the sitter
William Edward Haxtun (1832-1900), Beekman, New York and Kewanne, Illinois, brother
Annis B. (Haxtun) Strong (1864-1941), Portland, Oregon, daughter
Frederick Haxtun Strong (1895-1968), Portland, Oregon, son
Lillian W. (Neff) Strong (1904-1997), Portland, Oregon, wife
George Trowbridge Strong (1920-2000), stepson
Thence by descent
Literature
David R. Allaway, My People: The Works of Ammi Phillips (2021), vol. 1, p. 269, no. 804, vol. 2, p. 70.

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Lot Essay

A prolific portraitist who worked in the border areas of New York and Connecticut, Ammi Phillips rendered likenesses in a number of distinct styles over the course of his long itinerant career. The boldness, sharp realism and sense of restraint of the portrait of Elnathan Haxtun exemplifies the traits seen in the artist’s work from the 1840s period, known as the “Daguerreotype Period” during which the photographic process gained wide popularity. The present work is less stylized and romanticized than those dated slightly earlier to the “Kent Period”. Based on the quick likeness and inscription, the present work was likely painted in the mid-1840s (David R. Allaway, My People: The Works of Ammi Phillips (2021), p. 10).

Elnathan Haxtun (1795-1862) was born in Beekman, Dutchess County, New York to William Elnathan Haxtun (1769-1847) and Ruth (Tibbits) Haxtun (1770-1831). He married Maria DeLong (1801-1860) on April 23, 1823. Together, they had two children Sarah E. Haxtun and William E. Haxtun, both of whom were also painted by Phillips. Here, Phillips paints Haxtun with William Wirt’s Sketch of the Life and Character of Patrick Henry (Philadephia, 1817), a biography of the Founding Father, famously known for his 1775 “Give me liberty, or give me death!” speech.

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