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Lot 313: Edward Hicks (1780-1849) , Jonathan and David at the Stone Ezel oil on canvas

Est: $100,000 USD - $150,000 USD
Sotheby'sNew York, NY, USJanuary 18, 2008

Item Overview

Description

inscribed lower right; the red painted original stretcher, inscribed in Hicks' hand: Painted By Edward Hicks in His 67th y·r. oil on canvas

Dimensions

measurements 27 by 35 in. alternate measurements 68.6 by 88.9 cm

Artist or Maker

Literature

L.L. Beans, The Life and Works of Edward Hicks (Trenton, 1951), p. 21Mather and Miller, Edward Hicks: His Peaceable Kingdoms and Other Paintings (East Brunswick, N.J., 1983), p. 207, no. 118.Alice Ford, Edward Hicks: His Life and Art (New York, 1985), pp. 210-213.

Provenance

Christie's, The John Gordon Collection, sale 9052, lot 277Sotheby's, New York, The Estate of Leonardo L. Beans, November 21, 1980, sale 4479, lot 33

Notes

PROPERTY OF A PRIVATE COLLECTOR
Beside the Ezel, David and Jonathan embrace, as in the first Book of Samuel, chapter 20, and Jonathan bids David, his beloved friend, "Go in peace." King Saul, father of Jonathan, had sworn to kill David. The two friends had therefore made a covenant that if an arrow from the quiver of the youth who is seen disappearing toward the city should fall nearer the Ezel stone than near David, he must flee. "The Lord be between me and thee, and between my seed and they seed forever," Jonathan intones. Might they not, in their regalia, almost join the Indians of one of the Penn's Treaty oils as Hicks conceived it? In any case, the painting is a votive of brotherly love meant to unite sharply divided Friends. Like the Peaceable Kingdom that not so long ago turned up in Vineland, New Jersey, it is inscribed, "...painted by Edw. Hiscks in the 67th year." From somewhere in Bucks County the painting traveled to the shop of a dealer, where it remained until 1980. What has remained unknown until now is that this vision of peace was actually derived, in part, from an engraving in the Hicks family Bible that is signed by both Isaac and Edward Hicks. The detail of the Good Samaritan (Luke, x, 1:37)--engraved by C. Tiebout from an etching by James Akin after an oil by William Hogarth--was the source. Akin was better known for his satirical subjects. Isaac Hicks bought the Bible--published in Philadelphia in 1801--on February 23, 1802, and entered the date. The Bible remained in the Hicks family until the 1970s, when the rare pencil sketch of a log cabin in a clearing was found folded inside it. Hicks had eased the print out, pressed it into service, then returned it to its place. Whether Hicks had drawn a circle around himself or become, for the time being, a pariah, his isolation served posterity in 1846. But he was not ready to be shelved, even if his business suffered. He broke out of his aloofness to drive to Warminster Meeting, by way of Whitemarsh, to see Sarah's sister Susan Worstall Phipps. The call was one of the "most heavenly occasions." Excerpted from, Alice Ford, Edward Hicks: His Life and Art, Abbeville Press, New York, 1985, p.210.

Auction Details

Americana

by
Sotheby's
January 18, 2008, 12:00 PM EST

1334 York Avenue, New York, NY, 10021, US