Charles Balthazar Julien Févret de Saint-Mémin
Portrait of a Man

CultureAmerican
Titles
  • Portrait of a Man
Datec. 1804
Possible placeBaltimore, Maryland, United States
MediumBlack chalk heightened with white on pink paper
DimensionsSheet: 21 1/2 × 15 1/2 in. (54.6 × 39.4 cm)
Credit LineThe Bayou Bend Collection, gift of Miss Ima Hogg
Object numberB.59.52
Not on view

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Department
Bayou Bend
Description

The fashion for profile portraits flourished from the 1790s until the early decades of the nineteenth century. Among its best-known practitioners was Saint-Mémin, who immigrated to the United States in 1793 from his native Dijon in the wake of the French Revolution (see B.84.1 and B.77.20). Saint-Mémin set up a profile portrait practice in New York in 1796 with his partner Thomas Blugeut de Valdenuit, another French emigré. There, Saint-Mémin and Valdenuit popularized the profile portrait made with a physiognotrace, an instrument for taking an accurate likeness of a sitter. Valdenuit returned to France in 1797, and Saint-Mémin’s family moved to Burlington, New Jersey, in 1798. He assumed the life of an itinerant artist, traveling to Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, D.C., Richmond, and Charleston. As he visited these cities, Saint-Mémin was both creating and satisfying the demand for profile portraits, which were relatively inexpensive, accurate, and recalled the classical images of profile portraits in ancient Greco-Roman medals and vase painting. Before permanently settling in his native Dijon in 1814, Saint-Mémin had created nearly one thousand portraits, of which more than 800 he also engraved.

The identification of the sitter of this portrait is unknown. When John Hill Morgan (1870–1945), an assistant professor and curator of American painting at Yale University,  acquired the portrait in 1917, its sitter was identified as Vice President Richard Mentor Johnson who had served in Martin Van Buren’s administration. Morgan then noted the sitter’s resemblance to Alexander Smith in a Saint-Mémin portrait engraving (see related examples), which included Saint-Mémin’s inscription naming the sitter and giving the date of 1804; Morgan believed Smith was from Baltimore. In 1975, however, it was discovered that Alexander Smith could not be found in city directories for Baltimore during the years in which Saint-Mémin might have worked there. Based on the sitter’s resemblance to another possible Saint-Mémin subject from Baltimore, David Conyngham Stewart (1775–c. 1820; see related examples), a member of the Philpot family of Maryland County, Stewart was offered as an alternative identification to Smith.

Related examples: Alexander Smith, 1804, engraving, National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.; David Conyningham Stewart (?), c. 1803–4, watercolor, Maryland Historical Society, Baltimore.

Book excerpt: David B. Warren, Michael K. Brown, Elizabeth Ann Coleman, and Emily Ballew Neff. American Decorative Arts and Paintings in the Bayou Bend Collection. Houston: Princeton Univ. Press, 1998.


ProvenanceBy tradition belonged to descendants of Vice President Richard Mentor Johnson (1780–1850); [Stan V. Henkels, Philadelphia, May 28–29, 1917, lot 23]; purchased by [MacBeth Gallery, New York]; John Hill Morgan; [The Old Print Shop, New York]; purchased by Miss Ima Hogg, 1959; given to MFAH.
Inscriptions, Signatures and Marks
[no inscriptions]
[no marks]

Cataloguing data may change with further research.

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