A Declaração de Independência, 04 de Julho de 1776, Filadélfia, Estados Unidos (The Declaration of Independence, July 4, 1776) - John Trumbull
Filadélfia - Estados Unidos
Yale University Art Gallery New Haven Estados Unidos
OST - 53x78
Greatly
impressed with John Trumbull’s plans to execute a series of American history
paintings, Thomas Jefferson invited the artist to stay with him in Paris.
There, Trumbull wrote, “I began the composition of the Declaration of Independence, with
the assistance of [Jefferson’s] information and advice.” Trumbull represents
the moment when the committee appointed to draw up the document submitted
Jefferson’s draft for the consideration of the Continental Congress. Conscious
of creating an image for succeeding generations, Trumbull made the whole
committee—John Adams, Roger Sherman, Robert Livingston, Thomas Jefferson, and
Benjamin Franklin—present the document to John Hancock, rather than Jefferson
alone, which would have been historically accurate. He consulted Adams and
Jefferson about who should actually be in the scene. They urged that all the
delegates be included, even those who were not present or those who had opposed
the Declaration and did not sign. The goal was to preserve the exact likenesses
of those extraordinary individuals—aristocrats, lawyers, doctors, farmers,
shopkeepers—who had put their lives and fortunes on the line. Trumbull worked
on the Declaration for
more than three decades, hoping to include all fifty-six figures, but he was
unable to obtain all the likenesses. Of the forty-eight portraits here,
thirty-six were taken from life; others were copied from an existing portrait
or taken of a son as a substitute.

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