From Conservapedia John Trumbull (Lebanon, Connecticut, 6 June 1756 - New York City, 10 Nov., 1843) American painter. He is known as the artist of the American Revolution (millions of American schoolchildren have seen the Revolution through his eyes). At Harvard (1772 - 1773) he studied works of Brooke Taylor and William Hogarth .
Trumbull portraits include those of Thomas Jefferson (1788), George Washington (1790), George Clinton (1791), Alexander Hamilton (1792) and John Adams (1797).
Some of his paintings hang in the United States Capitol, the Yale University Art Gallery, Connecticut, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City and the Boston Museum of Fine Arts.
Trumbull's fame rests mainly on the four paintings, the "Battle of Bunker Hill," and "Death of Montgomery," which two pictures still stand unexcelled in American historical painting (both at Yale University Art Gallery), and on such strong portraits as those of Washington and Alexander Hamilton.[1]
The Death of General Warren at the Battle of Bunker Hill, 1786.
Categories: [American Painters] [American Portrait Painters]
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