Patriots and Presidents:
Philadelphia
Portrait Miniatures, 1760-1860
2009 Loan Exhibit
The 2009 featured loan exhibit, Patriots and
Presidents: Philadelphia Portrait Miniatures, 1760-1860, will
chronicle more than a century of portrait miniatures,
including those of Benjamin Franklin, Philadelphia's
most famous citizen, as well as former presidents
and patriots. A collection of small, portable
portraits depicting early Philadelphia's
most prominent figures celebrates Philadelphia's
history as the center of American government and
commerce in the 18th and 19th centuries.
Ivory,
oil on copper, and watercolor miniatures of early
American presidents and historical figures will
be displayed in an exceptional museum-quality exhibit
curated by Philadelphia collectors Dr. Robert and
Katherine Booth. The Booths have curated
four previous loan exhibits and are collectors
of Americana.
For more information, read the loan exhibit articles
from past Shows:
Fore & Aft – Philadelphia Collects Maritime (2008) |

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Philadelphia
owes its existence to the Schuylkill and Delaware
Rivers. Cradled between one river that led
to the abundant western frontier of Pennsylvania
and another that led to the oceans of the world,
Philadelphia was born and flourished. It developed
into the principal colonial port city and functioned
as a nexus of exchange... Read
article • View
PDF |
Phila.
Empire Furniture: Bold, Brash, & Beautiful
(2007) |
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From
the 18th century urban centers of Northern
Europe, a new-founded interest in the architecture
of the cultures of ancient Egypt, Greece, and
Rome began as early as 1750. By the late 18th
and early 19th Century in both Europe and America,
classically inspired architecture was complemented... Read
article • View
PDF |
The Schuylkill Villas (2006) |
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A villa,
by definition, is “a country estate;
the rural or suburban residence of a wealthy
person.” In Philadelphia, by the early
18th century, a prosperous merchant class had
begun to emerge, gentlemen whose wealth afforded
them a lifestyle that emulated their British
forebears... Read
article • View
PDF |
Vaulting Ambition: Gothic
Revival in Phila, 1830-1860
(2005) |
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The Gothic
style dominated the architecture of Europe
between 1100 and about 1500 A.D. It was, basically,
an architectural style, wherein the slender
masonry of the walls and the vaults was embellished
with lancet windows, moldings, paneling, tracery,
ribs, leafage, crockets, and pinnacles... Read
article • View
PDF |
Folk Art on Fire (2004) |
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Philadelphians
living in the second half of the eighteenth
century were accustomed to a life fraught with
physical dangers. Infant mortality approached
30%. Skeletal injuries carried a high rate
of amputation and, before anesthesia or antibiotics,
a 25% risk of death. Yellow fever regularly
killed hundreds of urban dwellers and drove
survivors... Read
article • View
PDF |
Patterns of Pride: Historical
Blue Staffordshire (2003) |
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One of the
most interesting categories of American antiques
is historical Staffordshire china, produced
exclusively by English potters from 1820 to
1850 in the district of Staffordshire, northwest
of London, for the American trade... Read
article • View
PDF |
This Glorious House
- Stenton (2002) |
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Stenton,
the country house of James Logan (1674-1751),
is one of the finest historic house museums in
the Philadelphia region. Administered by the
Colonial Dames of America in the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania since 1899, it is celebrated
for its distinguished architecture and collections. Learn
more... |
Needlework Treasures (2001) |
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The
Philadelphia Museum of Art, from its beginnings
during the Centennial Exhibition of 1876, has
become a preeminent international arts institution,
with impressive collections in a multiplicity
of media. In honor of the Museum's 125th anniversary,
the 2001 loan exhibition features rare and unusual
American and European needlework. Learn
more... |
It's About Time
(2000) |
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A
Millennium is in essence a celebration of the
passage of time, which has been calculated and
recorded in a thousand ways in as many years.
Within that period, we have come from natural
means (sun, wind, sand, and water), to marvelous
man-made mechanical devices, and back to elemental
forces. Learn more... |
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