The Last Drop (from McGuire Scrapbook)
Emanuel Leutze
About this artwork
Emanuel Leutze, the renowned 19th-century German-American best known for his monumental *Washington Crossing the Delaware* (1851), created *The Last Drop*, a intimate drawing preserved in the McGuire Scrapbook. This small-scale work (just 5 5/16 x 4 7/8 inches) showcases Leutze's skill in iron gall ink—a traditional, iron-based ink prized for its rich, enduring lines but notorious for its corrosiveness—and graphite on thin green wove letterpress paper. Likely a quick sketch or study, it reflects the artist's everyday practice, using repurposed printing paper common in studios of the era for economical experimentation. Housed in The Metropolitan Museum of Art's American Wing, this American cultural artifact was generously gifted by James C. McGuire in 1926. Its inclusion in a personal scrapbook hints at Leutze's behind-the-scenes world, offering visitors a rare peek beyond his epic historical canvases into fluid, spontaneous draftsmanship. Tagged with "Men," it evokes the era's social themes, perhaps temperance or camaraderie, underscoring Leutze's Romantic style that romanticized American ideals. A charming testament to artistic process, it reminds us how grand visions often begin with humble marks on humble paper.