Uncle Tom and Little Eva

Robert S. Duncanson American, 1821 - 1872
On View

in

African American, Level 2, West Wing

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About the Artwork

Uncle Tom and Little Eva

1853

Robert S. Duncanson

1821 - 1872

American

Unknown

Oil on canvas

Unframed: 27 1/4 × 38 1/4 inches (69.2 × 97.2 cm) Framed: 32 13/16 × 43 3/4 × 2 1/2 inches, 30 pounds (83.3 × 111.1 × 6.4 cm, 13.6 kg)

Paintings

African American Art

Gift of Mrs. Jefferson Butler and Miss Grace R. Conover

49.498

Copyright not assessed, please contact [email protected].

Markings

Signed, lower left: R. S. Duncanson 1853

Signed and dated, lower left: R. S. Duncanson 1853

Provenance

1853-1902, commissioned by the Reverend James Francis Conover, Episcopalian minister of Cincinnati, Detroit and elsewhere (Detroit, Michigan, USA)

1902-1949, Conover family (Detroit, Michigan, USA)

1949-present, gift to the Detroit Institute of Arts (Detroit, Michigan, USA)

For more information on provenance and its important function in the museum, please visit:

Provenance page

Exhibition History

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The exhibition history of a number of objects in our collection only begins after their acquisition by the museum, and may reflect an incomplete record.

We welcome your feedback for correction and/or improvement.

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Published References

Daily Cincinnati Gazette. March 17, 1853, 2.

Detroit Free Press. April 21, 1853, 21.

Porter, J. 1943, pp. 43-46.

Cavallo. 1950-51, pp. 21-25.

Bulletin of the DIA 30, no. 1 (1950-1951): 21-25, (ill.).

Porter, J. 1951, pp. 128-129, 147.

Art in America 39, no 3 (Oct. 1951): 128-129 (ill.).

Uncle Tom's Centenary Exhibition. Exh. cat., Detroit Public Library. Detroit, 1952, no. 140, p. 47.

Rediscovering the American Painting. Exh. cat., Cincinnati Art Museum. Cincinnati, 1955, no. 29.

Romantic America. Exh. cat., John Herron Art Museum. Indianapolis, 1961, no. 13.

Michigan Art Yesterday and Today. Exh. cat., Flint Institute of Arts. Flint, 1963, cat. no. 7.

The Portrayal of the Negro in American Painting. Exh. cat., Bowdoin College Museum of Art. Brunswick, ME, 1964, cat. no. 30.

Ten Afro-American Artists of the Nineteenth Century. Exh. cat., Howard University. Washington, D.C., 1967, p. 14.

Afro-American Artists 1800-1969. Exh. cat., School District of Philadelphia. Philadelphia, 1969, no. 74.

Dimensions of Black. Exh. cat., La Jolla Museum of Art. San Diego, 1970, cat. no. 169, p. 66 (ill. p. 64).

Robert S. Duncanson. Exh. cat., Cincinnati Art Museum. Cincinnati, 1972, no. 8, p. 38 (ill. p. 23).

Gibson, A. H. Artists of Early Michigan. Detroit, 1975, p. 95 (ill.).

Duncanson: A British-American Connection. Exh. cat., Museum of Art, North Carolina Central University. Durham, NC, 1984, p. 6, no. 12 (ill.).

Hartigan, L.R. Sharing Traditions, Five Black Artists in Nineteenth-Century America. Exh. cat., National Museum of American Art. Washington, D.C., 1985, p. 57, fig. 13.

The Portrayal of the Black Musician in American Art. Exh. cat, California Afro-American Museum. Los Angeles, 1987, fig. 11, p. 16.

The Color Line: Les artistes africains-américains et la ségrégation, 1865-2016. Exh. cat., Musée du Quai Branly. Paris, 2016 p. 19 (ill.).

Betjemann, Peter. "The Ends of Time: Abolition, Apocalypse, and Narrativity in Robert S. Duncanson's Literary Paintings." American Art (Fall 2017): pp.100-101 (fig. 11).

Pfohl, Katie A., ed. Inventing Acadia: Painting and Place in Louisiana. Exh. cat., New Orleans Museum of Art. New Orleans, 2019, pp. 94-95 (fig. 6), p. 169, pl. 16 (ill.).

Arabindan-Kesson, Anna. "From Poetry into Paint: Robert S Duncanson and the Song of Hiawatha." In Terra Foundation Essays. Vol. 6, Intermedia, Frohne, Ursula, ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2022, pp. 96-97, no. 6 (ill.).

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Catalogue Raisoneé

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Credit Line for Reproduction

Robert S. Duncanson, Uncle Tom and Little Eva, 1853, oil on canvas. Detroit Institute of Arts, Gift of Mrs. Jefferson Butler and Miss Grace R. Conover, 49.498.

Uncle Tom and Little Eva
Uncle Tom and Little Eva