Walking Stick of Moses Seymour

Description

At the age of fifteen, Moses Seymour Jr., sat for a portrait that honors both its sitter and implicitly, his father, the former Revolutionary War major from Litchfield, Connecticut, who commissioned this work. Like so many American painters of his generation, Earl studied with Benjamin West in London. Upon his return, he practiced his profession in his native Connecticut River Valley. Seymour's book and cane suggest that the young man reads and walks in harmony among nature's beauties, an activity that recalls the ideals of the ancient Roman poet Horace. In a pose that presses him close to the foreground, however, this cultured figure also conveys a message about man's domination over nature. The painting remained in the sitter's family until it was given to the museum.

Provenance

descended through Moses Seymour family to George S. Lockwood, Cleveland

Walking Stick of Moses Seymour

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1774

Accession Number

2003.285.a

Medium

wood and metal

Dimensions

Overall: 96.8 cm (38 1/8 in.)

Classification

Miscellaneous

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Mrs. George S. Lockwood Jr. in loving memory of her husband