Important Americana: Furniture and Folk Art

Important Americana: Furniture and Folk Art

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 177. A Pair of Silhouette Portraits.

Property from the Estate of Stuart W. Lawson, Connecticut

Ezra Wood, the Puffy Sleeve Artist

A Pair of Silhouette Portraits

Lot Closed

January 21, 05:57 PM GMT

Estimate

3,000 - 5,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Property from the Estate of Stuart W. Lawson, Connecticut

Ezra Wood, the Puffy Sleeve Artist

active 1830 - 1831

A Pair of Silhouette Portraits


hollow-cut silhouettes with watercolor on paper mounted over black

circa 1830

Each: Height 4 in. by Width 3 in.


depicting a lady in a blue dress holding a book and a gentleman in a blue waistcoat and walking stick; in what appears to be the original giltwood frame

Maine Antiques Digest, October 1980, p. 26-B.

In a groundbreaking article "Unmistaken Identity," published in Magazine Antiques, July/August 2014, Michael R. Payne, Suzanne Rudnick Payne and Samuel Herrup argue that the identity of the early 19th-century American folk portraitist, who had previously been referred to under the sobriquet, 'The Puffy Sleeve Silhouette Artist,' was actually Ezra Wood (1789-1841) of Buckland, Massachusetts. Wood likely learned the art of making silhouettes from his father-in-law, Josiah Fuller, who advertised as a silhouette artist in local papers in 1807.  As one of the most highly sought after silhouette artists of the early 19th century, Wood developed a singular vernacular that includes a dark face in profile juxtaposed against a vibrantly colored dress bearing exaggerated leg of mutton sleeves and a cinched waist.