Of the Senate House, the President's Palace, the barracks, the dockyard ... nothing could be seen except heaps of smoking ruins.... -A British Officer at Washington, 1814

1956
Not on view
Returned to lender
This work of art was on loan to the museum and has since been returned to its lender.
British military officer George Robert Gleig recorded (and later published) a vivid eyewitness account of the British military’s total destruction of Washington, D.C., in 1814. Lawrence drew from Gleig’s prose to recreate and interpret this nightmarish episode. The painter’s typically vibrant palette gives way in this blunt, austere composition, which portrays the night as a dark trap—a narrow space bound and lit by firing cannons on one side and marked by a massive wall of rubble on the other. The mortally wounded body of a small black-and-white bird in the left corner of the painting alludes to the dangerous predicament of Washington’s civilian population, confined within the burning city.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Of the Senate House, the President's Palace, the barracks, the dockyard ... nothing could be seen except heaps of smoking ruins.... -A British Officer at Washington, 1814
  • Artist: Jacob Lawrence (American, Atlantic City, New Jersey 1917–2000 Seattle, Washington)
  • Date: 1956
  • Medium: Egg tempera on hardboard
  • Dimensions: 12 × 16 in. (30.5 × 40.6 cm)
  • Classification: Paintings
  • Credit Line: Collection of Harvey and Harvey-Ann Ross
  • Rights and Reproduction: © 2022 The Jacob and Gwendolyn Knight Lawrence Foundation, Seattle / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
  • Curatorial Department: Modern and Contemporary Art