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John Wesley Jarvis

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American artist painter (1780–1839)
For other people named John Wesley, seeJohn Wesley (disambiguation).

John Wesley Jarvis
Self-portrait, 1812
Born1780 (1780)
South Shields, England
Died1839 (1840) (aged 57–59)
NationalityAmerican
Known forPainting

John Wesley Jarvis (1780 or 1781 – January 14, 1839) was an Americanpainter.

Early life and education

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Jarvis was the great, great nephew ofMethodist leaderJohn Wesley, and was born inSouth Shields, England in 1780 or 1781. His father was an English mariner, who moved his family to theUnited States in the mid-1780s. The Jarvis family settled inPhiladelphia where Jarvis spent his childhood and began his artistic training. He is known to have frequented the studio of the aging colonial-era portrait painterMatthew Pratt, and he knew the Danish painterChristian Gullager. His formal instruction began around 1796, when he became an apprentice toEdward Savage. He also spent time withDavid Edwin, an English engraver also employed by Savage.

Career

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Jarvis moved toNew York City in 1801 with Edward Savage. Within a year, he was working on his own as an engraver. In 1803, he entered into a partnership withJoseph Wood, which lasted seven years. Together, they executed engravings, miniatures, and larger portraits. Jarvis learned the technique of miniature painting fromEdward Malbone. By the time he entered the partnership with Wood, he was producing his first oil paintings, operating a drawing school, and developing inexpensive silhouette portraits.

In New York City, Jarvis enjoyed great popularity, though his eccentric mode of life impacts his work. He visitedBaltimore,Charleston, andNew Orleans, where he entertained and painted portraits of prominent people. In New Orleans, then GeneralAndrew Jackson sat for a portrait painted by Jarvis. He had assistants, includingThomas Sully andHenry Inman. He affected singularity in dress and manners.

In 1809, Jarvis married Betsy Burtis; she died four years later, in 1813. They had two children together. He parted with his family in order to seek portrait commissions in Baltimore. Although he made occasional trips back to his home base in New York City, he remained in Baltimore for several years. He maintained extended residences in other cities for most of the rest of his life.

During the 1820s and 1830s, while maintaining his residence in New York City, he worked in South Carolina, Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Washington, Virginia, Ohio, and Georgia. His apprentice,Henry Inman, probably accompanied him on these trips until his term of service ended in 1822.[1]

Jarvis rose to the top of his profession by 1814, when he took over an unprecedented commission for six full-length portraits of the naval heroes of theWar of 1812 for the City of New York;Gilbert Stuart gave up the important project after a dispute with the patrons.

For over a decade, he remained the premier portrait painter in New York City, where he established important ties to the political, mercantile, and cultural elite. Jarvis maintained the status of a social outsider known for his ostentatious dress, flippant manner, and consumption of alcohol. He was celebrated as a hilarious storyteller, and his ties to the theater world were extensive.

In the 1820s, he experienced some personal setbacks. In 1823, he was sued successfully by his apprenticeJohn Quidor for breach of contract. The following year, in 1824, he lost custody of his children in a court battle with his estranged second wife.

Death

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A decade later, in 1834, Jarvis suffered a debilitating stroke while inNew Orleans. Partially paralyzed and mentally incapacitated, he spent the rest of his life inNew York City, where he cared for by his sister. In 1839, largely impoverished, he died in New York City.[2]

Legacy

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Examples of his painting are in the collections of theNew York Historical Society,[2] and theMetropolitan Museum of Art.

Gallery

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References

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  1. ^American Art Gallery Organization
  2. ^abChisholm 1911, p. 276.

Attribution:

External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toJohn Wesley Jarvis.
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