Home

Works of Art

 

Works of Art

American Paintings and Sculpture: All

Work 185 of 3,349
Add to my Met GalleryAdd to My Met Gallery PrintPrint List ViewPrevious View
George Washington, ca. 1779–81

Charles Willson Peale ((1741-1827))

Oil on canvas; 95 x 61 3/4 in. (241.3 x 156.8 cm)

Gift of Collis P. Huntington, 1897 (97.33)

On January 18, 1779, the Supreme Executive Council of Pennsylvania passed a resolution commissioning a portrait of George Washington for the Council Chamber and selected Charles Willson Peale as the artist. In preparation, Peale traveled to the Princeton and Trenton battlefields in February of 1779 to make sketches for the background. The original portrait, the full-length version now in the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, was a tremendous success and Peale completed numerous copies for royal palaces abroad, each time updating the general's military dress. This figure of George Washington was probably painted between June and August of 1780. In every other version, Washington is shown after the Battle of Princeton, but here he is depicted after the Battle of Trenton, the turning point of the war. It has been suggested that this portrait was commissioned upon the order of Mrs. Washington, because it is the only portrait in which Washington wears his state sword and because the painting descended in the Washington family.