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Introduction
Stuart in Newport and Scotland (1755–75)
Stuart in London (1775–87)
Stuart in Dublin (1787–93)
Stuart in New York (1793–94)
Stuart in Philadelphia (1794–1803)
The George Washington Gallery
Stuart in Washington, D.C. (1803–5)
Stuart in Boston (1805–28)
The Met Store
Gilbert Stuart Family Feature
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Gilbert Stuart (American, 1755–1828)

Sarah Wentworth Apthorp Morton, ca. 1800–1802

Oil on canvas; 29 1/8 x 24 1/8 in. (74 x 61.3 cm)

Worcester Art Museum, Worcester, Mass., Gift of the Grandchildren of Joseph Tuckerman

1899.2

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Stuart's portrait of the poet Sarah Morton (1759–1846) conveys his fondness for her and his talent for capturing gesture and personality. It is a work of extraordinary spontaneity and passion, conveying the illusion of motion and an aspect of sensuality rarely seen in portraits of this period. Whether the intended action was raising or lowering the sheer fabric cloak, the result is the unveiling of Mrs. Morton's exquisitely beautiful face. Stuart painted two other, more conventionally finished portraits of Mrs. Morton, who wrote poems praising these portraits and others by Stuart.
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