Oliver and Abigail Wolcott Ellsworth
Oil on canvas; 76 x 86 3/4 in.
1792
 
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Oliver and Abigail Wolcott Ellsworth
Artist: Ralph Earl
(American, 1751-1801)
Oil on canvas; 76 x 86 3/4 in.
1792
Gift of the Heirs, 1903.7

Earl painted this portrait of Oliver and Abigail Ellsworth at their home in Windsor, Connecticut, on the Connecticut River. An icon of the constitutional period, this is one of the artist’s most creative portraits. The artist successfully depicts Ellsworth’s role in the formative stages of the United States. Ellsworth (1745-1807) was a graduate of Princeton College, a successful lawyer, and a member of the Continental Congress and the Constitutional Convention. He played a significant role in the writing of and ratification of the Constitution and later became the third Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. Earl centrally places a copy of the recently ratified U.S. Constitution (including the text for Article Seven which was authored by Ellsworth) as well as the view of the Ellsworth’s newly renovated and painted homestead to suggest Oliver and Abigail’s separate but overlapping spheres of influence and responsibility. Though Oliver alone holds the document and only Abigail is connected by the drapery in the background to the house and surrounding farmlands, they each contributed to the other’s success. Abigail, who at the age of 35 had given birth to the last of her nine children the year before her portrait was painted, is portrayed in a truthful manner by the artist. The couple’s newly renovated house (in which they are seated) is also shown through the window.
 


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