
We The People: American Folk Portraits
On view in the Gladys and Franklin Clark Foundation Gallery.
This exhibition is made possible through the generosity of Don and Elaine Bogus.
Without folk painters, the faces of many members of the middle and, sometimes, lower classes would not have been recorded. The portraits reveal much about ordinary people: how they lived, what they valued, and how they wished to be remembered. Folk portraits give us glimpses of the countless people who shaped America as vitally and lastingly as her better known movers and shakers. The artists too left something of themselves. They did not achieve their occupation through formal guidance or direction from others but, instead, through inborn talent and intuition.

Portrait of the Smith Family by Capt. James Smith, Richmond, Virginia, ca. 1807. Museum Purchase, 2011.100.1

Boy in Plaid by unidentified artist, New England, ca. 1845. Gift of Abby Aldrich Rockefeller, 1936.100.14

Portrait of Mrs. Seth Wilkinson attributed to Lyman Parks, New York, probably 1827-1830. Museum Purchase, 1960.100.2

Delve into our Exhibitions Online
Explore our Online Collections to learn more about The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation's vast collections of fine, decorative, mechanical, and folk art.
