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Colonel Isaac Barré
Accession # 16.25
Artist Gilbert Stuart
Title Colonel Isaac Barré
Date 1785
Medium Oil on canvas
Dimensions 35 13/16 x 27 3/4 in. (91 x 70.5 cm)
Signed Unsigned
Credit Line Carll H. de Silver Fund
Location Visible Storage: Case 24, Screen N (Paintings)

Curatorial Remarks: Ten years into his stay in London, having trained under the American-born master Benjamin West and established himself as a rising portraitist, Gilbert Stuart painted this striking likeness of the war hero and fiery Member of Parliament Colonel Isaac Barré. A leader of the opposition and a vehement advocate for the American colonies, Barré was known for his 1765 “Sons of Liberty” speech opposing the Stamp Act (which imposed taxes on the colonies without their consent). In this forceful portrait inspired by the works of the seventeenth-century Flemish painter Anthony van Dyck, Stuart employed heavy shadow to mask the deformed right side of Barré’s face, where the sitter had taken a bullet at the Battle of Quebec (1759) while serving under Major-General James Wolfe during the French and Indian War.