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Collection Record Detail

Object Name
Print - "The Destruction of the Royal Statue in New York"
Object Number
2013-116-1
Description
German or French engraving with hand coloring, entitled at the bottom, "La Destruction de la Statue Royale a Nouvelle Yorck." Image of a city square with European style architecture. In the center is a tall pediment with a statue of a standing male in the style of a Roman emperor, holding a scepter in his right hand. The statue is being pulled down using ropes, ladders, and pickaxes by a group of men, predominantly enslaved or free Africans (depicted in short pants and turbans) and a small number of white men. Onlookers are gathering to the left of the statue and in nearby windows and balconies. A group of soldiers can be seen in the distance to the right of the statue. Framed under glass.
Provenance
This engraving is similar to those produced by François Xavier Habermann (1721–1796) in Germany.
Comment
This print depicts an artist's interpretation of the events of July 9, 1776, when civilians and soldiers in New York pulled down an equestrian statue of King George III in Bowling Green. The scene has a number of clear inaccuracies, including the depiction of the statue (the real statue was modeled after an equestrian statue of Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius), the environs and architecture, and the participants.
Date Made
c.1776
Materials
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