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No image number on slide
Bust of a Woman, probably Emmeline Ames Dewey (Mrs. Abner Dewey)(1813-1883)
No image number on slide

Bust of a Woman, probably Emmeline Ames Dewey (Mrs. Abner Dewey)(1813-1883)

DatePossibly 1847
Attributed to 1823 - 1851
MediumPainted basswood
DimensionsOverall: 21 x 17 1/4 x 10in. (53.3 x 43.8 x 25.4cm)
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number1957.701.3
DescriptionA freestanding painted woodcarving of a bust of a woman, the paint now mostly gone from her face. She wears a black dress with two rows of buttons down the front and back. Her short black hair is cut in an ear-length bob, the top pulled back and held with a clip.Label TextThe loss of paint of this figure's face has radically changed its appearance, but the image remains a compelling one. Simplification of form and uncompromising frontality create a solidity and sense of monumentality that is disproportionate to the sculpture's life size. The stylized, linear treatment of the volumentric mass of the hair is typical of Ames's work, as is the attention to detail which, here, includes a clip in the top of the hair and the continuation of the rows of buttons down the back of the dress.
The portrait may well represent the artist's sister, Emmeline (1813-1883), who, in 1834, married Abner Dewey (1809-1893). In 1847, Ames carved bust portraits of Emmeline and Abner Dewey's three children, Adelaide (?-?), Maria (1843-1924), and Millard F. (1845-1916). If this bust of an adult woman represents Emmeline, most likely it was created then, too.
ProvenanceFound in Pennsylvania and purchased from Edith Gregor Halpert, Downtown Gallery, New York, N.Y.
2001.701.2, Carving
Erma ("Junior") Lewis (1948-1999)
1995
D2006-CMD-1687
Shields Landon ("S. L.") Jones (1901-1997)
1985-1989
No image number on slide
Probably 1860-1880
1931.701.3, Figure
Probably ca. 1865
No image number on slide
William Norris (1869-1948)
1938-1939
1960.701.3, Figure
Wilhelm Schimmel (1817-1890)
1875-1890
No image number on slide
Probably 1850-1875
No image number on slide
Probably 1900-1925
No image number on slide
Possibly 1849-1865