Creator |
Cooper, Peter, w.c. 1698-1725. |
Title |
The South East Prospect of the City of Philadelphia. |
Date |
Ca. 1718 |
Physical Description |
Oil on canvas ; 20 x 87 inches ; Framed: 27 1/4 x 94 1/4 x 3+1=4 inches. |
Is referenced by |
Benjamin Franklin and His Circle. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1936 (#273). |
|
American Processional. Washington, D.C.: Corcoran Gallery of Art, 1950, p. 84 (#16). |
|
Library Company of Philadelphia. Quarter of a Millennium. Philadelphia: Library Company, 1981, p. 176-177. |
|
Worldly Goods: The Arts of Early Pennsylvania, 1680-1758. Philadelphia: Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1999, p. 31, 80, 232. |
|
Soltis, Carol E. “Highlights from the Collection of Paintings and Sculpture,” Magazine Antiques 70 (2) (2006): 80-81, 83. |
Notes |
The South East Prospect of the City of Philadelphia is the oldest surviving oil painting that depicts a North American city.
A key at the bottom numbers and identifies landmarks. The arms of William Penn and the City of Philadelphia appear in the
top corners. In the lower left corner the artist has depicted himself sketching the scene.
|
|
LCP Minutes vol. 7, February 5, 1857, p. 92-93: "Mr. Hutchinson read the following letter from Hon. George M. Dallas (Minister
to Great Britain), dated London, January 12, 1857 and laid on the table the painting therein mentioned. `I will send for the
Phila Liby an antique daub painted as is believed here in 1720 purporting to be "The South East prospect of the city of Philadelphia
by Peter Cooper, painter." It is on torn canvas some 8 feet long by 1 1/2 wide. One of the members of Parliament in looking
over the rubbish of a City curiosity shop picked it up and brought it to me. The principal buildings of the City at that day
are pointed out & 24 good old Philadelphia Householders are named in the margin. Although worthless on any score but that
connection with Auld Lang Syne it presents at half a glance so strong a contrast to the Consolidated City of 1857 that it
has its interest for a corner of the Phila Library'. Whereupon the following Resolution was unanimously adopted:`Resolved
that the Directors of the Library Company of Phila having received from the Hon. George M. Dallas a picture of Phila. by Peter
Cooper do return him their grateful thanks for his attention and kindness in procuring & transmitting to them a most interesting
& valuable Record of the appearance of our City as it was upward of a century & quarter ago, with a reference to the public
buildings & private residences of many of our earliest and most remarkable citizens.'"
|
|
Gift of George Mifflin Dallas, 1857. |
|
Exhibited in: Great Central Fair in Philadelphia, in the "Wm. Penn Parlor" (1864); Pennsylvania Museum of Art's exhibition,
The Sea (1935); Metropolitan Museum of Art's exhibition, Franklin and His Circle (1936); Corcoran Gallery's exhibition, American
Processional, 1492-1900, (1950); University of Pennsylvania's exhibition, Benjamin Franklin Winston Churchill (1951); Library
Company's exhibition, Quater of a Millennium (1981).
|
Subject |
Cityscapes. |
|
Ships. |
Geographic subject |
Philadelphia (Pa.) |
Genre |
Painting. |
Location |
OBJ 603 |
Accession number |
OBJ 603 |