John Philip de Haas
Charles Willson Peale, 1772
About this artwork
Charles Willson Peale'sJohn Philip de Haas* (1772) is a striking oil-on-canvas portrait measuring 50 x 40 inches, now housed in the National Gallery of Art's W. Mellon Collection. at the height of colonial America's pre-Revolutionary fervor, it captures the namesake sitter—likely a prominent Philadelphia merchant—with Peale's signature realism and attentiveness to character. Peale, a polymath artist, naturalist, and founder of first public museum, mastered portraiture in the Anglo-American tradition, drawing from influences like John Singleton Copley. His works often celebrated the emerging merchant class and civic leaders, reflecting Enlightenment ideals of individualism and progress. This piece, created just three years before the Boston Tea Party, embodies the poised confidence of colonial elites amid brewing tensions with Britain. The oil medium shines here, enabling Peale's deft handling of light, texture, and subtle psychological depth—hallmarks of 18th-century portraiture. A testament to early American artistic ambition, it invites visitors to ponder the human stories behind history's turning points.