Joshua Johnson

Item

Title (Dublin Core)
Joshua Johnson
Portrait of a Gentlemen
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Description (Dublin Core)
Joshua Johnson, or Johnston, the earliest documented professional African-American painter, was active in Baltimore during the late eighteenth and first quarter of the nineteenth century. His background, however, remains a mystery. The families and descendants of those whose portraits he painted claim that Johnson was a former slave. Whether Johnson was a slave or not is open to question since his name appears in the City Directory of Baltimore from 1796 to 1824, when the directory did not list slaves. Johnson's identity as an African American has been questioned as well. In editions of the directory in which an asterisk designated a person of color, there is no asterisk by Johnson's name. Johnson may have been biracial and fair enough to elude identification as an African American by publishers of the directory. In the directory of 1817, however, Johnson's name appears among the "free householders of Color" listed separately in the publication. (Smithsonian American Art Museum)
Identifier (Dublin Core)
1964.5
Date (Dublin Core)
1830
Creator (Dublin Core)
Johnson, Joshua
Publisher (Dublin Core)
Bowdoin College. Museum of Art
Source (Dublin Core)
Bowdoin College Museum of Art
Rights (Dublin Core)
Bowdoin College Museum of Art
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