From Revolution to Republic.

PositionFrom Revolution to Republic in Prints and Drawings, exhibition on American Revolution

Stunning engravings, etchings, watercolor, pen and ink drawings, among many other items, including firsthand visual testimonies of major battles (Concord, Lexington, and Bunker Hill) and scenes of the early revolutionary period--a number of them by British and American soldiers who participated in the incidents they depicted--are featured in "From Revolution to Republic in Prints and Drawings." Also on view are a variety of George Washington portraits, ranging from formal paintings to allegories, mourning pictures, and textiles.

This exhibition of nearly 100 items is organized in two sections: "Dawn of the American Revolution, 1768-1776" and "Selections from the C.W. McAlpin Collection." It is an illuminating examination of the portrayals of current events of the period as well as the rich visual art forms prevalent during that time.

In "Dawn of the American Revolution," visitors see how printmaking in America expanded during the Revolutionary War to fulfill the increasing needs for visual reportage of current events and easily distributable political propaganda. This section has eyewitness accounts of significant early conflicts between the American colonies and Great Britain, including the Boston Massacre, the battles of Concord, Lexington, Bunker Hill, and Long Island, and the British capture of Ft. Washington and Ft. Lee.

Many images were created by British and American soldiers, and historians continue to rely on them to corroborate written accounts of the period and construct more comprehensive narratives about the American Revolution. Included are such treasures as the Paul Revere engraving, "A View of Part of the Town of Boston in New-England and Brittish [sic] Ships of War Landing Their Troops! 1768" (1774), Henry Pelham's "The...

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