TRUMBULL, John - b. 1756 Lebanon, CT, d. 1843 New York - WGA

TRUMBULL, John

(b. 1756 Lebanon, CT, d. 1843 New York)

American painter, architect and diplomat. His importance lies in his historical paintings memorialising events in the American War of Independence. Applying Benjamin West’s and John Singleton Copley’s realistic innovations in history painting to American subjects, he created a series of images, reproduced in countless illustrations, that have become icons of American nationalism. They are also symbolic of his lifelong political and artistic identity.

Trumbull fought in the American War of Independence (for a time he was aide-decamp to George Washington) and his career was devoted mainly to depicting the outstanding events and personalities of the revolution. He was strongly influenced by Benjamin West, with whom he studied in London. In 1817 he became President of the American Academy of Fine Arts in New York, but his tyrannical attitude, especially towards young painters, led to many members leaving to set up the National Academy of Design in 1825. His pictures did not sell well, so in 1831 he assigned those in his studio to Yale University Art Gallery in exchange for an annuity. The most famous work there, and one of the most reproduced images in American art, is The Declaration of Independence (1786-97), in which most of the portraits were painted from life. His larger works are usually fairly stodgy, but his smaller pictures and sketches can be much livelier.

Trumbull, who died an embittered old man, published an autobiography in 1841.

Declaration of Independence
Declaration of Independence by

Declaration of Independence

This painting in the United States Capitol Rotunda depicts the presentation of the draft of the Declaration of Independence to Congress. It was based on a much smaller version of the same scene, presently held by the Yale University Art Gallery. Trumbull painted many of the figures in the picture from life and visited Independence Hall as well to depict the chamber where the Second Continental Congress met. The oil-on-canvas work was commissioned in 1817, purchased in 1819, and placed in the rotunda in 1826.

Portrait of Captain Samuel Blodget in Rifle Dress
Portrait of Captain Samuel Blodget in Rifle Dress by

Portrait of Captain Samuel Blodget in Rifle Dress

The portrait is of Captain Samuel Blodget, Jr. (1757-1814), an officer of the New Hampshire Militia, who fought at the battle of Princeton. Trumbull has painted Blodget full length, but on the same scale as the figures in the history paintings he was producing at this time, rather than on the more conventional life-size portrait format. Blodget was a man of singular talents and, although not a professional architect, he designed the first Bank of the United States, in Philadelphia, one of the most notable buildings in the city.

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