Portrait of Georgia P. Farley Holding a Blue Jay
Dateca. 1848
Attributed to
Thomas Poindexter
MediumOil on canvas
DimensionsOverall: 25 × 22 1/4in. (63.5 × 56.5cm)
Credit LineMuseum Purchase, The Friends of Colonial Williamsburg Collections Fund
Object number2020-42,A&B
DescriptionPortrait of a toddler in a white dress with orange embroidered trim on the neckline and shoulders. She is standing barefoot in a landscape scene and is holding a blue jay in her hands.Label TextThese three portraits of the Farley sisters were commissioned by their father, George Porterfield Farley, and his wife, Charlotte, in the late 1840s. The sisters, Charlotte, Chestina and Georgia were descendants of the earliest settlers to Jefferson County, Mississippi and lived in an area known as Shankstown (now Lorman) where their father was a planter. The Farley family were Catholics, and the daughters were all educated in Bardstown, Kentucky at Nazareth Academy; a boarding school operated by the Sisters of Charity. The Farley sisters were painted by Thomas Poindexter not long after the artist arrived in Mississippi. Originally from Kentucky, Poindexter also spent time in Tennessee before moving his family to Hind Co., Mississippi prior to 1850. In all three states, Poindexter advertised in local newspapers gain commissions and this is likely how George Farley became aware of the artist.
ProvenanceThis portrait and the two companion portraits of her sisters were commissioned by their father, George Porterfied Farley, and his wife in the late 1840s. They all descended together, first to their daughter, Charlotte Polyxenia Farley; then to her daughter, Mary Lorman Hays; to her son, Laforest Alyoysius Dunn; to his wife, Ethel George Dunn; to her niece, Melody George Logan who sold the portraits to Peter Patout in 2014, who then sold the portrait to Colonial Williamsburg.
18th century
Charles Bird King (1785-1862)
ca. 1820
William Hodgson (1748-1806)
1789-1791
William Jennys (1774-1859)
1795
Joshua Johnson (active ca. 1800-ca. 1824)
ca. 1818
Joshua Johnson (active ca. 1800-ca. 1824)
1798-1800
