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Artist/Maker (1781 - 1860)
Depicted (American, 1746 – 1813)

Chancellor Robert R. Livingston (1746–1813)

ca. 1816
Painted pine with plaster
Overall: 24 × 15 × 3/4 in., 15 lb. (61 × 38.1 × 1.9 cm, 6.8 kg)
Purchase, Abbott-Lenox Fund
1959.53
This bust of Chancellor Livingston came from the house of Dr. William Wilson (1756-1828), a neighbor in the Hudson Valley. When Dr. Wilson came to New York in 1784 from the University of Glasgow, bearing a letter of introduction to Livingston, the latter invited him to settle at Clermont. While there, Wilson became the Chancellor's intimate friend, and many years later the executor of his estate. The sculpture was carved out of pine and painted white to resemble marble. It was most likely produced after Livingston’s death on commission from Wilson, and may have been modeled after a portrait of Livingston, such as one painted by Gilbert Stuart in 1794.
DescriptionPortrait bust
ClassificationsSCULPTURE
Collections
  • The Chancellor at Home: Robert R. Livingston and Clermont
Chancellor Robert R. Livingston (1746-1813)
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Thaddeus Kosciuszko (1746–1817)
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Henry Ward Beecher (1813–1887)
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Robert Dodge (1820–1899)
Henry Baerer
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Member of the Vanden Huysen Family (Son)
Unidentified artist
early 18th century
1942.555