Gilbert Stuart was born on December 3, 1755, in Saunderstown, a village of North Kingstown in the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations. He was baptized at Old Narragansett Church on April 11, 1756. He was the third child of Gilbert Stuart, a Scottish immigrant employed in the snuff-making industry, and Elizabeth Anthony Stuart, a member of a prominent land-owning family from Middletown, Rhode Island. Stuart’s father owned the first snuff mill in America, which was in the basement of the family homestead.
Stuart moved to Newport, Rhode Island, at the age of six, where his father pursued work in the merchant field. In Newport, Stuart first began to show great promise as a painter. In 1770, he made the acquaintance of Scottish artist Cosmo Alexander, a visitor to the colonies who made portraits of local patrons and who became a tutor to Stuart. Under the guidance of Alexander, Stuart painted the portrait of Dr. Hunter’s Spaniels when he was 14; it hangs today in the Hunter House Mansion in Newport. In 1771, Stuart moved to Scotland with Alexander to finish his studies; however, Alexander died in Edinburgh one year later. Stuart tried to maintain a living and pursue his painting career, but to no avail, so he returned to Newport in 1773.
Stuart’s prospects as a portraitist were jeopardized by the onset of the American Revolution and its social disruptions. Although he was a patriot, he departed for England in 1775. His painting style during this period began to develop beyond the relatively hard-edged and linear style that he had learned from Alexander. He was unsuccessful at first in pursuit of his vocation, but he became a protégé of Benjamin West in 1777 and studied with him for the next six years. The relationship was beneficial, with Stuart exhibiting for the first time at the Royal Academy in the spring of 1777.
By 1782, Stuart had met with success, largely due to acclaim for “The Skater,” a portrait of Sir William Grant. It was Stuart’s first full-length portrait, and according to a rival, it belied the prevailing opinion that Stuart “made a tolerable likeness of a face, but as to the figure, he could not get below the fifth button.” Stuart said that he was “suddenly lifted into fame by a single picture.” The prices for his pictures were exceeded only by those of renowned English artists Joshua Reynolds and Thomas Gainsborough. Despite his many commissions, however, he was habitually neglectful of finances and was in danger of being sent to debtors’ prison. In 1787, he fled to Dublin, Ireland, where he painted and accumulated debt with equal vigor.
Stuart ended his 18-year stay in Britain and Ireland in 1793, leaving behind numerous unfinished paintings. He returned to the United States with a particular goal of painting a portrait of George Washington and having an engraver reproduce it and provide for his family through the engraving’s sale. He settled briefly in New York City and pursued portrait commissions from influential people who could bring him to Washington’s attention. In 1794, he painted statesman John Jay, from whom he received a letter of introduction to Washington. In 1795, Stuart moved to the Germantown section of Philadelphia, where he opened a studio, and Washington posed for him later that year.
Stuart painted Washington in a series of iconic portraits, each of them leading to a demand for copies and keeping him busy and highly paid for years. The most famous and celebrated of these likenesses, the Athenaeum portrait, is portrayed on the United States one-dollar bill. Stuart painted about 50 reproductions of it. However, he avoided completing the original version. After finishing Washington’s face, he kept it to make copies, which he sold for $100 each. Thus, the original portrait remained in its unfinished state at the time of his death in 1828. The painting was jointly purchased by the National Portrait Gallery and Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, in 1980 and is generally on display in the National Portrait Gallery.
Another celebrated image of Washington is the full-length Lansdowne portrait, now in the National Portrait Gallery. Its historical importance is almost matched by an early forgery based on it, which was purchased for the White House. This painting was rescued during the Burning of Washington in the War of 1812 thanks to the efforts of First Lady Dolley Madison and Paul Jennings, one of President James Madison’s slaves. Three replicas of the original portrait are accepted by Stuart. Additional copies were painted by other artists. In 1803, Stuart opened a studio in Washington, D. C.
Stuart moved to Devonshire Street in Boston in 1805, continuing to receive critical acclaim and experience financial troubles. He exhibited his works locally at Doggett’s Repository and Julien Hall. Predictably, other American artists, such as John Trumbull, Thomas Sully, Washington Allston, and John Vanderlyn, sought his advice.
Stuart married Charlotte Coates around September 1786; she was 13 years his junior and “exceedingly pretty.” They had 12 children, five of whom died by 1815 and two others of whom died in their youth. Their daughter Jane (1812–1888) was also a painter. She sold many of his paintings and her replicas of them from her studios in Boston and Newport, Rhode Island. In 2011, she was inducted into the Rhode Island Heritage Hall of Fame.
In 1824, Stuart suffered a stroke, which left him partially paralyzed, but he continued to paint for two years until his death in Boston on July 9, 1828, at 72. He was buried in the Central Burial Ground at Boston Common.
Stuart left his family deeply in debt, and his wife and daughters were unable to purchase a grave site. He was, therefore, buried in an unmarked grave, which was purchased cheaply from Benjamin Howland, a local carpenter. His family recovered from their financial troubles 10 years later, and they planned to move his body to a family cemetery in Newport. However, they could not remember the exact location of his body, and it was never moved. There is a monument for Stuart, his wife, and their children at the Common Burying Ground in Newport.
The Boston Atheneum held a benefit exhibition of Stuart’s works in August 1828 in an effort to provide financial aid for his family. More than 250 portraits were lent for this critically acclaimed and well-subscribed exhibition. This also marked the first public showing of his unfinished 1796 Atheneum portrait of Washington.
By the end of his career, Gilbert Stuart had painted the likenesses of more than 1,000 American political and social figures. He was praised for the vitality and naturalness of his portraits, and his subjects found his company agreeable. John Adams said:
“Speaking generally, no penance is like having one’s picture done. You must sit in a constrained and unnatural position, which is a trial to the temper. But I should like to sit for Stuart from the first of January to the last of December, for he lets me do just what I please and keeps me constantly amused by his conversation.”
Stuart was known for working without the aid of sketches, beginning directly on the canvas. His approach is suggested by the advice which he gave to his pupil Matthew Harris Jouett: “Never be sparing of color, load your pictures, but keep your colors as separate as you can. No blending, its destruction to clear & beautiful effect.” Although this is an exaggeration to avoid muddiness, Stuart’s colors were remarkably fresh. At Stuart’s best, he had an extraordinary ability to convey the impression of “luminous, transparent flesh” with color coming from beneath. The face seemed to be imbued with life, while the beauty of its coloring conveyed a spiritual quality to contemporaries. Although uneven, he could produce astonishingly strong likenesses.
John Henri Isaac Browere created a life mask of Stuart around 1825. In 1940, the U.S. Post Office issued a series of postage stamps called the “Famous Americans Series,” commemorating famous artists, authors, inventors, scientists, poets, educators, and musicians. Gilbert Stuart is found on the 1 cent issue in the artists’ category, along with James McNeill Whistler, Augustus Saint-Gaudens, Daniel Chester French, and Frederic Remington.
Today, Stuart’s birthplace in Saunderstown, Rhode Island, is open to the public as the Gilbert Stuart Birthplace and Museum. The birthplace consists of the original house where he was born, with copies of his paintings hanging throughout, as well as a separate art gallery that displays several original paintings by both Gilbert Stuart and his daughter Jane. The museum opened in 1931. Gilbert Stuart was inducted into the Rhode Island Heritage Hall of Fame in 1965.
Gilbert Stuart’s paintings of Washington, Jefferson, and others have served as models for dozens of U.S. postage stamps. Washington’s image from the famous portrait The Athenaeum is probably the most noted example of Stuart’s work on postage.
Stuart produced portraits of about 1,000 people, including the first six Presidents. His work can be found today at art museums throughout the United States and the United Kingdom, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Frick Collection in New York City, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., the Philadelphia Museum of Art in Philadelphia, the National Portrait Gallery in London, and the Worcester Art Museum in Worcester, Massachusetts.
This is a partial list of portraits painted by Stuart.
• Abigail Adams – Second First Lady of the United States, wife of John Adams
• John Adams – Second President of the United States
• John Quincy Adams – Sixth President of the United States
• Charles Humphrey Atherton – United States Representative from New Hampshire from 1815 to 1817
• John Jacob Astor – First American multi-millionaire, fur trader, art patron
• John Bannister – Owner of Bannister’s Wharf in Newport, Rhode Island
• Commodore John Barry – Father of the American Navy
• Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry – Hero of the Battle of Lake Erie in 1814.
• Gilbert Stuart, painted by Jane Stuart, now housed at the Gilbert Stuart Birthplace
. Ann Willing Bingham – Philadelphia socialite
• Horace Binney – Prominent Philadelphia lawyer
• Elizabeth Bowdoin, Lady Temple – wife of Sir John Temple, first British consul general to the United States, 1785.
• Hugh Henry Brackenridge – early American writer, Pennsylvania Supreme Court justice, and founder of the University of Pittsburgh.
• Jean Baptiste Cassimere Breschard – Performer and theatrical impresario
• Rosalie Stier Calvert – Belgian-born heiress and mother of Charles Benedict Calvert
• Mary Willing Clymer – Philadelphia socialite
• John Singleton Copley – American colonial portraitist
• Thomas Dawes – Early American architect, builder, military leader, politician
• Horatio Gates – American Revolutionary War general
• King George III – King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, 1760–1820
• King George IV – King of United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, 1820–30
• John Jay – First Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court
• Thomas Jefferson – Third President of the United States
• Rufus King – a signer of the United States Constitution
• Robert Kingsmill – Admiral in the Royal Navy during the American and French Revolutionary Wars
• King Louis XVI – King of France, 1774–92
• James Madison – Fourth President of the United States
• Samuel Miles – Revolutionary War General and Philadelphia mayor
• James Monroe – Fifth President of the United States
• Daniel Pinckney Parker – Prominent Boston merchant
• John Randolph of Roanoke – Virginia congressman and senator.
• Joshua Reynolds – English artist
• Henry Rice – Boston merchant and Massachusetts state legislator.
• John Taylor III – Virginia planter, builder of The Octagon House in Washington, DC.
• Thomas Townshend, 1st Viscount Sydney – the cities of Sydney in New South Wales and Sydney, Nova Scotia, are named in his honor.
• John Trumbull – artist during the period of the American Revolutionary War
• George Washington – First President of the United States
• Martha Washington – First Lady of the United States, wife of George Washington
• Benjamin West – American painter
• Catherine Brass Yates – Philadelphia socialite
• John Bill Ricketts – Equestrian, leader of Ricketts’ Circus in Philadelphia
• Elisabeth Merry – Wife of Anthony Merry 1805.
For additional reading:
• The Makers of Modern Rhode Island, Patrick T. Conley, History Press, 2012.
• Evans, Dorinda (1999). The Genius of Gilbert Stuart. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-05945-4.
• Fielding, Mantle (1929). “Paintings by Gilbert Stuart not mentioned in Mason’s Life of Stuart”. The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. 53 (2). The Historical Society of Pennsylvania. JSTOR 20086696.
• McLanathan, Richard (1986). Gilbert Stuart. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc. ISBN 9780810915015.
• Mason, George C. (1879). The Life and Works of Gilbert Stuart. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons.
• Park, Lawrence, John Hill Morgan, and Royal Cortissoz (1926). Gilbert Stuart: An Illustrated Descriptive List of His Works. New York: W. E. Rudge.