On view

American Art
Wilmerding Pavilion
Libby Anschutz Gallery

Girl in Pink,

ca. 1832

Ammi Phillips, 1788–1865; born Colebrook, CT; died Curtisville, MA
y1958-74
These paired portraits are two of nine known paintings produced by Phillips in the 1830s depicting small children in nearly identical stock dresses. All but two hold a strawberry plant, whose red, almost heart-shaped fruit perhaps connotes love. Because young boys and girls were dressed similarly in the nineteenth century, it is sometimes difficult to ascertain the sex of a child in a portrait, although accompanying accoutrements can provide clues, establishing gender roles often at the expense of women and their social agency. The boy in Boy in Red holds a utilitarian toy hammer positioned before him like a displaced phallus, suggesting his future role as creator and builder. The painting’s cognate, Girl in Pink, represents a girl wearing a coral teething necklace and displaying a piece of fruit in front of her womb, symbolizing her eventual fertility.

Information

Title
Girl in Pink
Dates

ca. 1832

Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
59.7 × 50.8 cm (23 1/2 × 20 in.) frame: 74.6 × 65.7 × 5.4 cm (29 3/8 × 25 7/8 × 2 1/8 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Edward Duff Balken, Class of 1897
Object Number
y1958-74
Place Made

North America, United States

Culture
Materials

Acquired by Edward Duff Balken (1874-1960), North Egremont (MA), by 1947 [1]; donated to the Princeton University Art Museum, 1958. [1] The painting was exhibited in Pittsburgh in 1947 with other American paintings from Balken’s collection (American provincial paintings, 1790-1877: from the collection of Edward Duff Balken: galleries E and F, January 9 through February 23, 1947, (Pittsburgh, PA: Department of Fine Arts, Carnegie Institute, 1947, no. 23).