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A newly acquired 1790 portrait of George Washington is now on permanent display at the American Revolution Museum at Yorktown ...
At the Peabody Essex Museum, tracking the American Experiment through more than two centuries of art
Works from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts illustrate a nation's uneasy progress through the lens of one of the ...
One of the first issues showcased George Washington, his image on a 10-cent stamp from Gilbert Stuart’s iconic portrait. Washington reigns as the most depicted figure in U.S. stamp history, gracing ...
The tradition first started with Gilbert Stuart's portrait of George Washington, and has continued with most subsequent presidents.
The Gilbert Charles Stuart circa 1795 painting of George Washington in the Reading Public Museum has received a frame recently purchased by the museum that is a stylistic fit with the original ...
Object Details Author George Washington, 22 Feb 1732 - 14 Dec 1799 Addressee Gilbert Stuart, 3 Dec 1755 - 9 Jul 1828 Credit Line National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution Date April 11, 1796 ...
The official portrait of George Washington by Gilbert Stuart in 1797. Courtesy of White House Historical Association Stuart made additional paintings of Washington as well as Presidents John Adams ...
Calkins Creek, $18.99 (40p) ISBN 978-1-6626-8000-7 Albee and Innerst wittily render the backstory of the portrait of George Washington (1732–1799) that graces the U.S. one-dollar bill.
Gov. John Chafee describes the Gilbert Stuart portait of George Washington during "Tour of Our State House," the first color broadcast on WJAR-TV in 1963. (WJAR) ...
Marc Pachter, director of the National Portrait Gallery, stands beneath the Gilbert Stuart portrait of George Washington in Little Rock, on April 22, 2004, during the painting's final stop in a ...
In 2001, he was instrumental in guaranteeing that Gilbert Stuart’s famous and unique 1796 painting of President George Washington — known as the Lansdowne Portrait, after one of its earliest ...
If you’re envisioning Dolley tearing the famous Gilbert Stuart portrait down as the Red Coats closed in and the curtains burned, well, that’s not quite what happened.
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