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Portfolios%3D%22598%22%20and%20Sort_Artist%3D%22Hopkins,%20Milton%20W.%22
Painting
Ann Gennett Pixley Lacey (1809 - 1841)
Attributed to Milton W. Hopkins, 1789 - 1844
Hopkins, Milton W.
United States
1789 - 1844
Male
North, Noah
United States
1809 - 1880
Male
Previous Attribution
30 x 25 in. (76.2 x 63.5 cm)
.
.
.
approximate installation dimensions
frame
.
.
.
Oil
Oil
1835-1836
1835
1836
1800-1900, 19th century, folk art, New York State & Local History, paintings, portraits, women
Painting
In this painting, Ann Lacey (the mother of Pierrepont and Eliza (78.188 and 78.189)) holds a book in her hand. Her traditional pose suggests that she was a cultured and literate individual.
The portraits of the Lacey family were passed down through the generations in the family home in Scottsville, New York, until 1932, when they were presented on the occasion of a marriage and moved to a new home in Cambridge, Massachusetts. In 1978, the generous owners donated the group of family heirlooms to the Memorial Art Gallery, to be enjoyed by its many visitors.
[Excerpted from gallery label text, 2006]
M. W. Hopkins
American, 1789 - 1844
Ann Gennett Pixley Lacey (1809 - 1841)
ca. 1835 - 1836
Oil on canvas
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Dunn
in memory of Ruth Hanford Munn
and James Buell Munn, 78.187
Ann Gennett was born in Kirkland, New York, and her family later moved to nearby Chili. Around 1830, she married Allen Tobias Lacey, son of a neighboring farmer and political associate of her father. She was the mother of Pierrepont and Eliza, whose portraits hang nearby.
In the painting, she is shown holding a small book, a popular motif that suggests literacy and a certain level of affluence.
Ann Lacey died of cancer at the age of 32 and she is buried in the Fellows Cemetery in Chili. Shortly thereafter, Allen Lacey remarried, and in 1847, the family moved west to farm in Marshall, Michigan.
{Excerpted from gallery label text, Oct. 2011, Colleen Piccone, Curatorial}
The Lacey family, whose portraits are on view nearby, lived in this home at 9 Scottsville-Chili Road in Scottsville, New York in the 1830s, where it is believed their portraits were painted and first hung. Two children in this 1890s photograph were relatives of the Lacey family. The girl on the far left was Ruth Hanford (Munn), in whose memory the portraits were given to the Memorial Art Gallery.
The paintings were passed down through the generations in this family home until 1932, when they were presented on the occasion of a marriage and moved to a new home in Cambridge, Massachusetts. In 1978, the generous owners donated the group of family heirlooms to the Memorial Art Gallery, to be enjoyed by its many visitors.
{Excerpted from gallery text panel, Oct. 2011, Colleen Piccone, Curatorial}
1978.187
item
Memorial Art Gallery
9/8/1999
78.187TR1
transparency
4 x 5
00/00/00
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Graphics/blank.gif
78.187SL1
slide
full
2 x 2
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glossy
8 x 10
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http://127.0.0.1:5000/Graphics/blank.gif
negative
4 x 5
00/00/00
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Graphics/blank.gif
78.187DI1
digital image
Memorial Art Gallery
Imaging complete
4 x 5
10/30/2001
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Media/images/78.187_A1.jpg
78.187DI2
digital image
00/00/00
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Media/images/related_images/78.187-191_R1.jpg
78.187DI3
digital image
Memorial Art Gallery
Imaging complete
4 x 5
00/00/00
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Media/images/78.187_A2.jpg
5hopkins2.tif
digital image
00/00/00
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Media/images/SeeingAmerica/5hopkins2.tif
Painting
Eliza Pixley Lacey (1834 - 1839)
Attributed to Milton W. Hopkins, 1789 - 1844
Hopkins, Milton W.
United States
1789 - 1844
Male
North, Noah
United States
1809 - 1880
Male
Previous Attribution
30 x 25 in. (76.2 x 63.5 cm)
.
.
.
approximate installation dimensions
frame
.
.
.
Oil
Oil
1835-1836
1835
1836
1800-1900, 19th century, children, folk art, New York State & Local History, paintings, portraits, women
Painting
M. W. Hopkins
American, 1789 - 1844
Eliza Pixley Lacey (1834 - 1839)
ca. 1835 - 36
Oil on canvas
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Dunn
in memory of Ruth Hanford Munn and
James Buell Munn, 78.188
M.W. Hopkins painted several portraits of young girls holding flower baskets. Eliza was painted when she was about two, and may have been Hopkins’ youngest and most endearing sitter.
Portrait painting was not Hopkins’ sole occupation; he was also a farmer and ornamental painter who decorated carriages and signs.
Eliza was only five when she died. She is buried in Fellows Cemetery in Chili along with her mother, Ann, whose portrait hangs nearby.
{Excerpted from gallery label text, Oct. 2011, Colleen Piccone, Curatorial}
The Lacey family, whose portraits are on view nearby, lived in this home at 9 Scottsville-Chili Road in Scottsville, New York in the 1830s, where it is believed their portraits were painted and first hung. Two children in this 1890s photograph were relatives of the Lacey family. The girl on the far left was Ruth Hanford (Munn), in whose memory the portraits were given to the Memorial Art Gallery.
The paintings were passed down through the generations in this family home until 1932, when they were presented on the occasion of a marriage and moved to a new home in Cambridge, Massachusetts. In 1978, the generous owners donated the group of family heirlooms to the Memorial Art Gallery, to be enjoyed by its many visitors.
{Excerpted from gallery text panel, Oct. 2011, Colleen Piccone, Curatorial}
1978.188
item
Memorial Art Gallery
9/8/1999
78.188TR1
transparency
4 x 5
00/00/00
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Graphics/blank.gif
78.188SL1
slide
full
2 x 2
00/00/00
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Graphics/blank.gif
78.188DI1
digital image
Memorial Art Gallery
Imaging complete
4 x 5
10/30/2001
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Media/images/78.188_A1.jpg
78.187DI2
digital image
00/00/00
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Media/images/related_images/78.187-191_R1.jpg
5hopkins3.tif
digital image
00/00/00
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Media/images/SeeingAmerica/5hopkins3.tif