Child of the Van Rensselaer Family with Servant

John Heaton

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 755

This rare double portrait of a White toddler with an unidentified enslaved youth represents the only known naturalistic likeness of a colonial Black resident of Albany, New York. It is strongly attributed to John Heaton, a Scottish-born limner (portraitist) who lived and worked in Albany during the 1730s and 1740s. The striking painting raises questions about the racialized social order of a colonial Dutch American household. According to historical records, enslaved children as young as three were typically “presented” to the son or daughter of their enslaver, a dehumanizing practice that forced the children into an inherently fraught domestic relationship.

Child of the Van Rensselaer Family with Servant, John Heaton (active 1730–1745), Oil on canvas

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