Francis Lucas Waddell
John Vanderlyn, ca. 1837
About this artwork
Step into the refined world of 19th-century American portraiture with *Francis Lucas Waddell*, a compelling oil on canvas by John Vanderlyn, created around 1837. Measuring 25¼ × 21 inches, this work exemplifies the era's emphasis on capturing individual likenesses with precision and poise, serving as both personal memento and social statement. Vanderlyn, a prominent American artist trained in Paris, infused his portraits with a neoclassical clarity and elegance, favoring balanced compositions and lifelike detail. The oil medium, prized for its luminous depth and ability to render subtle textures like fabric and skin tones, underscores the technical mastery of the time, when such paintings often commemorated merchants, professionals, or community leaders amid America's expanding republic. Now gracing The American Wing at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, this piece arrived as a thoughtful 1919 gift from Mrs. M. Howard Hoopes and Miss Grace H. Patterson, honoring Miss Ann S. Stephens. It invites visitors to ponder the personal stories behind the formal gaze, reflecting cultural values of dignity and legacy in early industrial America.