Title
Allegory vs. Authenticity: The Commission and Reception of Howard Chandler Christy's The Signing of the Constitution of the United States
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
Spring 2012
Publication Title
Winterthur Portfolio
Abstract
Over a four-year period during the Great Depression, Howard Chandler Christy painted three diverse versions of the signing of the Constitution. The last—an enormous canvas 20 by 30 feet—was the most expensive painting commissioned by the federal government to date and took three years to research and complete. This essay examines how and why politics intervened in the commission and creation of Christy’s painting and contextualizes the canvas visually and socially. Ultimately, the author suggests that Congress’s participation in the representation of this pivotal moment in US history was shaped by the looming threat of war in Europe.
DOI
10.1086/665046
Version
Publisher's PDF
Publisher's Statement
© 2012 University of Chicago Press
Recommended Citation
Baskind, Samantha. "Allegory vs. Authenticity: the commission and Reception of Howard Chandler Christy's The Signing of the Constitution of the United States." Winterthur Portfolio Mar. 2012: 63-92. Print.
Volume
46
Issue
1