Lot 3
  • 3

*, William Kennedy

bidding is closed

Description

  • William Kennedy
  • A Little Girl with Her Black Cat
  • oil on canvas
  • framed 32 by 27 in. 81.3 by 68.56 cm.
painted circa 1840; in a period frame.

Provenance

Descended in a Maine family until 1995

David A. Schorsch, New York

Catalogue Note

William H. Kennedy was born in New Hampshire and worked as a portrait painter in New Bedford, Massachusetts, Ledyard, Connecticut, and Berwick, Maine from 1845 through 1847. He moved to Maryland in 1849 or 1850, living at various locations in Baltimore with his wife and three children until 1869.

Kennedy is generally regarded as one of the folk painters of the Prior-Hamblin School, named for brothers-in-law William Matthew Prior (1806-1873) and Sturtevant J. Hamblin (active 1837-1856). No direct link to these artists has yet been found, although Kennedy worked in Massachusetts at the same time Prior and Hamblin did, and lived a few doors away from Prior in Baltimore in the late 1850s.

Stylistically, Kennedy’s crisp, flat likenesses strongly resemble the Prior and Hamblin portraits. His work can be distinguished from theirs by his consistent portrayal of his sitters with steeply sloping shoulders, squared noses, and small, pursed lips.

Excerpted from Paul S. D’Ambrosio and Charlotte Emans, Folk Art’s Many Faces: Portraits in the New York State Historical Association, Cooperstown, 1987, pp. 107, and Beatrix T. Rumford, ed., American Folk Portraits: Paintings and Drawings from the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Center, Boston, 1981, pp. 138-139.