HUMB_200918_101
Existing comment: Charles Willson Peale
The Artist in His Museum
1822
oil on canvas
Peale was an artist, naturalist, and patriot.
In 1784 he founded a museum designed as "a world in miniature." He intended its exhibits to teach Americans to see their cultural identity in the nation's democratic ideals and its natural history. In this painting, he constructed a self-portrait that seamlessly merges his own identity with that of the museum. Charles Willson Peale had served during the American Revolution with George Washington, whose portrait is visible at the upper left. Directly below is the case containing a bald eagle, the national symbol. Peale's taxidermy tools and his loaded palette and brushes imply an artist still ready and capable. Behind the curtain is the mastodon, the centerpiece of Peale's Museum. This very skeleton is on view in the rotunda behind you.
Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, Gift of Mrs. Sarah Harrison (The Joseph Harrison Jr. Collection)
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