The Portrait's Subject: Inventing Inner Life in the Nineteenth-Century United States
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Sarah Blackwood
Sarah Blackwood is associate professor of English at Pace University.
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The Portrait's Subject - Sarah Blackwood
The Portrait’s Subject
STUDIES IN UNITED STATES CULTURE
Grace Elizabeth Hale, series editor
Series Editorial Board
Sara Blair, University of Michigan
Janet Davis, University of Texas at Austin
Matthew Guterl, Brown University
Franny Nudelman, Carleton University
Leigh Raiford, University of California, Berkeley
Bryant Simon, Temple University
Studies in United States Culture publishes provocative books that explore U.S. culture in its many forms and spheres of influence. Bringing together big ideas, brisk prose, bold storytelling, and sophisticated analysis, books published in the series serve as an intellectual meeting ground where scholars from different disciplinary and methodological perspectives can build common lines of inquiry around matters such as race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, power, and empire in an American context.
The Portrait’s Subject
Inventing Inner Life in the Nineteenth-Century United States
Sarah Blackwood
The University of North Carolina Press CHAPEL HILL
© 2019 The University of North Carolina Press
All rights reserved
Set in Merope Basic by Westchester Publishing Services
Manufactured in the United States of America
The University of North Carolina Press has been a member of the Green Press Initiative since 2003.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Blackwood, Sarah, author.
Title: The portrait’s subject : inventing inner life in the nineteenth-century United States / Sarah Blackwood.
Other titles: Studies in United States culture.
Description: Chapel Hill : University of North Carolina Press,
[2019]
| Series: Studies in United States culture | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2019016541| ISBN 9781469652580 (cloth : alk. paper) | ISBN 9781469652597 (pbk : alk. paper) | ISBN 9781469652603 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Portraits, American. | Identity (Psychology) in art. | Identity (Psychology) in literature. | Psychology and art.
Classification: LCC N7593 .B57 2019 | DDC 704.9/42—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019016541
Cover illustration: Valerie Hegarty, Red Curtain 7, 2015, watercolor on paper, 9 × 12 in. Courtesy of the artist.
Portions of chapter 2 were previously published in a different form as Fugitive Obscura: Runaway Slave Portraiture and Early Photographic Technology,
American Literature 81, no. 1 (2009): 93–125. Portions of chapter 4 were previously published in a different form as Isabel Archer’s Body,
Henry James Review 31, no. 3 (Fall 2010): 271–79.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
In the Portrait Gallery of American Literature
CHAPTER ONE
Face
Hepzibah’s Scowl
CHAPTER TWO
Head
Writing the African American Portrait
CHAPTER THREE
Limbs
Postbellum Portraiture and the Mind-Body Problem
CHAPTER FOUR
Mind/Brain
The Physiognomy of Consciousness
CHAPTER FIVE
Bones
The X-ray and the Inert Body
Epilogue
Selfie Nation
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Figures
1. Sir Joshua Reynolds, Portrait of Master Bunbury , 1780–81 19
2. George Cruikshank (after a design by H.T.D.B.), Bumpology , 1826 26
3. John Singleton Copley, Mrs. George Watson , 1765 28
4. Thomas Eakins, Miss Amelia Van Buren , ca. 1891 28
5. Gerhard Richter, Betty , 1988 28
6. Cephas Giovanni Thompson, Nathaniel Hawthorne , 1850 32
7. Thomas Phillibrown, Nathaniel Hawthorne , 1851 33
8. Sir Peter Lely (British), Portrait of John Leverett , 17th century 45
9. John Smibert (American, 1688–1751), Portrait of Sir William Pepperrell , 1746 46
10. Head of Rameses,
etching, in James C. Prichard, The Natural History of Man , 1848 50
11. Runaway,
Columbus Democrat , August 18, 1838 55
12. The Mississippi Free Trader , June 11, 1851 56
13. Specimen of Modern Printing Types and Ornaments , 1841 58
14. Masthead, The North Star , June 2, 1848 59
15. Masthead, The North Star , February 22, 1850 59
16. Facsimile masthead, The Liberator 60
17. Advertisement for the capture of Harriet Jacobs 61
18. Thomas Eakins, Whistling for Plover , 1874 80
19. Thomas Eakins, Miss Amelia Van Buren , ca. 1891 84
20. Thomas Eakins, The Thinker: Portrait of Louis N. Kenton , 1900 85
21. Thomas Eakins , The Old-Fashioned Dress (Portrait of Helen Montanverde Parker) , ca. 1908 86
22. Thomas Eakins, Pushing for Rail , 1874 91
23. Thomas Eakins, Whistling for Plover , 1874 92
24. Timothy H. O’Sullivan and Alexander Gardner, A Harvest of Death , Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, 1863 93
25. Thomas Eakins, Amelia Van Buren , late 1880s 101
26. Thomas Eakins, Portrait of Dr. Edward Anthony Spitzka , 1913 108
27. Looking for ‘the Face Within the Face’ in Man,
New York Times , March 4, 1906 109
28. W. C. R ö ntgen, from On a New Kind of Rays,
Science , February 14, 1896 144
29. C. M. Dally Dies a Martyr to Science,
New York Times , October 4, 1904 147
Acknowledgments
This project has no single origin point. Maybe it started during the hours I spent in the vault at the Terra Museum of American Art, where I worked in the registrar’s office. Or maybe it started in Nina Baym’s intensive Henry James graduate seminar, or during an important brief conversation I had with Carl Smith about Lawrence Selden and Lily Bart, where we mostly nodded excitedly at one another in agreement. Just as likely, however, it began in middle school, when I realized that pictures of me did not always feel like me, except for the rare moments they really did. Or even more recently, in the time I spend looking at pictures of my children, wondering what I’m seeing.
No matter where I locate this book’s beginning, my first thanks go to Betsy Erkkila, Carl Smith, and Jay Grossman who helped me shape it. At Northwestern University and the University of Illinois, I was given support, encouragement, intellectual challenge, and sound advice from Betsy, Carl, and Jay, as well as Ivy Wilson, Julia Stern, Chris Lane, Jennifer DeVere Brody, Blakey Vermeule, Wendy Wall, Brian Edwards, Stephanie Foote, Michael Bérubé, and Tim Dean. A gallery of good cheer and fellowship hung all around me during those years, and I would especially like to thank for that Sarah Mesle, Katy Chiles, Peter Jaros, Marcy Dinius, Joanne Diaz, Gayle Rogers, Dan Gleason, Matt Peck, Jenny Mann, Janaka Bowman, Liz McCabe, Catherine Carrigan, Hunt Howell, Abram Van Engen, Wendy Roberts, Ed McKenna, Rochelle Rives, Scott Herring, Dahlia Porter, and Gabe Cervantes.
This book has benefited from the time granted me in archives and museums, and with fellow scholars of American visual culture. My time as a Patricia and Philip Frost Fellow in American Art and Visual Culture at the Smithsonian American Art Museum was invaluable and I thank Eleanor Harvey, the late Cynthia Mills, and Amelia Goerlitz at SAAM; Wendy Wicke Reaves at the National Portrait Gallery; and my fellow fellows
at SAAM: Miguel de Baca, Megan Walsh, Leslie Ureña, Sascha Scott, Anna Marley, and Kate Elliott. Kriston Capps made my sojourn in DC feel like home. As a participant in the NEH Summer Institute on the Visual Culture of the Civil War, I had the opportunity to learn from Donna Thompson Ray, Joshua Brown, Sarah Burns, Greg Downs, David Jaffe, Deborah Willis, Anthony Lee, and Ellen Gruber-Garvey, as well as Aston Gonzalez, Heidi Knoblauch, Catherine Jones, and Molly Mitchell. I thank the librarians, archivists, and curators at The Phillips Collection, SAAM, the American Antiquarian Society, the New York Public Library’s Berg Collection and Division of Art, Prints, and Photographs, the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture Photographs and Prints Division, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Brooklyn Museum of Art for helping me track down leads and open up new vistas.
Audiences at the McNeil Center for Early American Studies, the New York Public Library, the University at Albany, SUNY, Pomona College, the CUNY Graduate Center, and Harvard University have been provocative interlocutors at different stages of this project. I thank, for inviting me to share with these venues, Megan Walsh, Wendy Roberts, Kyla Wazana Tompkins, Duncan Faherty, and Charmaine Nelson.
At Pace University, I have been blessed to find friends, not only colleagues. Endless gratitude to the denizens of the fifteenth floor: Catherine Zimmer, Sid Ray, Stephanie Hsu, Erica Johnson, Kelley Kreitz, Lauren Cramer, Helene Levine-Keating, Ebele Oseye, Mark Hussey, Gene Richie, and honorary members, Matthew Bolton and Emily Welty. Tom Henthorne, you are so missed. I am grateful for Pace English Professor Emerita Jean Fagan Yellin’s work on Harriet Jacobs, every day. Thanks also to the unflagging support of Dean Nira Herrmann, and the invaluable assistance of Carol Dollison. To my students, always balancing work, family, and passion: you blow me away. Thanks especially to my former student Yahdon Israel for unscrewing the doors from the jambs.
All of the knowledge I’ve pursued over the years would go nowhere without the people who have helped me hone my writing. Thanks to the writers, editors, and Twitter pals who have kept me grounded and, hopefully, concise: Anna Beth Chao, Sarah Bunting, Tara Ariano, Sarah Smith, Daisy Parente, Elda Rotor, Naomi Fry, Silvia Killingsworth, Dan Kois, Jessica Winter, Laura Marsh, Jane Hu, Evan Kindley, Phil Maciak, Stephanie Insley Hershinow, Emily Gould, Meaghan O’Connell, Kathryn Jezer-Morton, and Rumaan Alam. Thank you also to all of the writers who have shared their knowledge and vision with us at Avidly and Avidly Reads. I am so proud of our collective work. And, to my writing and editing partner, Sarah Mesle: we found love in a Google Doc.
Thank you to Jordan Stein, Janet Neary, Michelle Chihara, Greta La Fleur, Laura Fisher, Brian Connolly, Glenn Hendler, Duncan Faherty, Teresa Goddu, Paul Erickson, Gus Stadler, Britt Rusert, Jasmine Cobb, Lara Langer Cohen, Toni Jaudon, Dana Luciano, Elizabeth Freeman, Stephanie Foote, Pam Thurschwell, Eric Lott, Shawn Michelle Smith, and many others who make thinking and writing about nineteenth-century U.S. cultural studies so pleasurable. The key to surviving this profession is not only to find your people but also to make new spaces together: scholarly associations, group texts, conference hotels, writing groups and retreats. Thank you to Hester Blum for co-founding C19: Society for Nineteenth-Century Americanists; and to Hester, Kyla Wazana Tompkins, Claire Jarvis, and Sarah Mesle for their gallows humor and good advice; to Lauren Klein, Kyla Schuller, and Karen Weingarten for our especially human and humane writing group; to Marcy Dinius, Peter Jaros, and Katy Chiles for such trusted companionship; to Stefanie Sobelle and the yurts for air and space to breathe. Thank you also, and always, to Pete Coviello: a true friend through it all.
At the University of North Carolina Press, Mark Simpson-Vos and Jessica Newman have been steady editorial hands, generous with their line edits, vision, and more. Grace Hale sent me a wonderfully bolstering note at exactly the right time. My deepest gratitude goes to my anonymous readers, whose reports were exacting and kind. The marketing, publicity, and design team have done the near impossible in getting this book out of my mind and into the world. Thank you also to Margaretta Yarborough for proofreading and Pamela Gray for preparing the index. Contemporary artist Valerie Hegarty, whose art brilliantly reworks commonly held ideas about United States history and culture, created the evocative painting on the cover.
To my dearest friends and family, thank you for not being academics! Lauren Waterman, Margaret Richardson, and Sarah Gallagher are, simply, my best friends and favorite people. My parents David and Elizabeth, and my brothers Dave and Dan and their families, have supported and cheered me on, no matter what strange thing I have chosen to obsess over, from ballet to poetry to graduate school. I owe you all everything.
And, finally, Edward, Ames, and Owen: you have always made me feel seen, just as I am. No words or images could ever capture that feeling, but I’m happy to keep trying.
The Portrait’s Subject
Introduction
In the Portrait Gallery of American Literature
Lily Bart has made a mistake.
Midway through Edith Wharton’s tragic 1905 novel The House of Mirth, Bart attends an important party. The hosts of the party, the Wellington Brys, are giving a general entertainment
that will feature a tableau vivant—society women posed, costumed, and dramatically lit for the viewing pleasure of the partygoers—organized by the famous (fictional) portraitist Paul Morpeth. Lily Bart is a beauty from a good, old family with social status but no money; penniless, she clings precariously to the luxurious New York society life that has shaped her. To survive she needs to find and marry a rich man; she must comport herself at all times accordingly. Her performed portrait will be scrutinized by the party attendees who can make or break her.
Bart recognizes the stakes, and yet sees the tableau vivant as a chance for her vivid plastic sense
to find eager expression in the disposal of draperies, the study of attitudes, the shifting of lights and shadows.
¹ She believes that by presenting herself to an audience as a portrait—as a work of art—she will have license to play and to ply with her famous beauty, and chooses to dress herself in a scandalously gauzy white dress, modeling herself after the 1776 Joshua Reynolds portrait Mrs. Lloyd. Her performance is a declaration of independence in the face of extreme social pressure to conform.
While an aesthetic triumph, Bart’s performance is ultimately a personal disaster. She has failed to appreciate the specific form her audience’s scrutiny will take. Bart thought she was showing off her posture, the graceful curve of her neck, even her freedom and pliability. But her audience sees something different, something deeper; they look at Bart’s performance and see what they perceive to be her real
self. Her love interest, the bookish bachelor Lawrence Selden, revels in what he believes is her brave authenticity, divested of the trivialities of her little world.
² His cousin Gerty indulges in the sense that Lily’s performance reveals a truth that Gerty alone is privy to: It makes her look like the real Lily—the Lily I know.
³ And Bart’s voyeuristic cousin Ned Van Alstyn looks through her performance in search of provocative intention: Deuced bold thing to show herself in that get-up; but, gad, there isn’t a break in the lines anywhere, and I suppose she wanted us to know it.
⁴
Bart had hoped that her performed portrait would reinvest the principal of her surface beauty; instead, it invited a form of penetrating vision in search of something true about her subjectivity. And so here was Lily Bart’s mistake: she thought she and her audience would be on the same page, enjoying how portraiture allowed one to play around with surfaces, likeness, texture, shape. But by 1905, in the United States, portraiture had become enlisted in the project of imagining psychological depth. For a woman like Lily Bart—darting, fearful, desirous in all the wrong
ways—becoming suddenly penetrable to interpretation was no triumph. Her slow slide downward toward her death begins that night, with her mistake about the power of portraiture.
This book tells the story of how that power developed. Cultural ideas about portraiture shifted dramatically between 1839 and the end of the nineteenth century in the United States. During this period, the United States was awash in portraiture, both literal and imagined: in novels, magazine stories, newspaper mastheads, advertisements, author portraits, early psychology textbooks, phrenological head charts, daguerreotypes, oil portraits, X-ray images, and more. This book examines how portraiture’s changing symbolic and aesthetic practices helped produce new ideas about human interiority. I analyze how proliferating representational images of the human body, the soma, began to characterize inner life as deep.
Through readings of the literary, material, and visual culture of the era, I uncover how portraiture’s aesthetic representations of the self relate to its emerging psychological explanations. I argue that portraiture not only reflects changing ideas about the self; it produces these ideas by imaginatively shaping and probing the relationship between body, soul, and mind.
THE FICTIONAL LILY BART was in 1905 caught up in a moment not unlike our own. Today we are confronted with new questions about what visual representations (and the new visual technologies that produce them) tell us about human subjectivity. I open with a narrative account of a tableau vivant gone wrong because it captures how the cultural values associated with portraits seep into multiple interpretive contexts: aesthetic interpretation, the possibilities of sociability, the ever new sciences
of the self. The tableau vivant is a specific and idiosyncratic form of art in its own right; but, as Lily Bart’s choice to emulate the Reynolds portrait makes clear, the germ animating the scene’s main conflict is portraiture’s longstanding central role in mediating often contradictory ideas about human subjectivity. Lily Bart’s failed portrait of herself hangs next to the original Mrs. Lloyd in the portrait gallery of American literature, asking us to consider historical shifts in how we understand the relationship between the self and its visual representation.
Portraiture’s representations of surface likeness played a key role in imagining new forms of inner life over the course of the nineteenth century. The relationship between portraiture’s representation of human exteriors and shifting ideas about human interiors is not new or historically unique to the era this book addresses. The competing claims of portraiture to represent external appearance accurately and to express something deeper about a person that goes beyond mere likeness have long been in tension. But when daguerreotype photography was introduced in the United States in 1839, this tension found new expression. Here was a visual technology that would allow exact representation of external appearance. And yet, should it only aim for accuracy? This was a question that thinkers, writers, and artists circled around for much of the era I study.
Painter and daguerreotypist Marcus Aurelius Root attempted an answer in The Camera and the Pencil, or the Heliographic Art (1864), one of the first histories of American photography. He explains, "In the course of this work I have repeatedly and most emphatically urged that expression is essential to a portrait, whether taken with a camel’s hair pencil, or with the pencil of the sun. Nor can this point be pressed too often or too forcibly. For a portrait, so styled, however splendidly colored, and however skilfully finished its manifold accessories, is worse than worthless if the pictured face does not show the soul of the original—that individuality or selfhood, which differences him from all beings, past, present, or future."⁵ Importantly, Root connects painted and photographic portraiture, emphasizing the importance of genre over medium. He believes that the goal of a portrait should be the same "whether taken with a camel’s hair pencil
[paintbrush],
or with the pencil of the sun
[camera]."
But what should that shared goal be? Root offers a number of answers: "soul,
the original,
individuality," and "selfhood. His list is meaningfully slippery and worth further analysis: how does a portrait come to show
soul"? How will artists and viewers know those things when they see them? Perhaps most importantly, what even are these metaphysical qualities, and how did we come to agree that they are, or ever can be, visible?
In this book, I probe the spaces between related but not synonymous words like soul,
individual,
and selfhood.
In doing so, I theorize the role of the portrait in offering up a new vision of human subjectivity in the years between the invention of photography and the discovery of the X-ray in 1895.⁶ Though I demarcate this study’s boundaries with the invention of these two visual technologies, I do not make its claims about portraiture according to medium or technological innovation. Rather, I begin in 1839 because after that year portraits came within reach of large numbers of Americans, quickly becoming one of the most common culturally expressive forms a middle-class person would encounter. The increasingly common experience with photographic portraits—sitting for them, viewing them, even taking them—resulted in a popular, literary, and artistic fascination with what portraits tell us about individuals. I contend that the conjoined effects of nineteenth-century literature’s obsession with portraits and the simultaneous explosion of the form’s availability to everyday people encouraged new ways for readers and consumers to imagine themselves, and the characters that portraits conjured, as subjects with interiority.
Throughout this book, I account for the cultural centrality of the nineteenth-century portrait in multiple verbal and visual expressive forms. In the pages that follow, I consider both portraits and representations of portraits in literary and other forms. Recognizing the important material differences between literal and imagined portraiture, I also assert the important similarities between disparate objects crafted within the same representational economy. Art historians generally reserve the term portrait
to describe a work of art that visually depicts a real individual.⁷ But this limited definition does not allow for a full exploration of the omnipresence of portraiture in nineteenth-century American culture. How should we understand the hundreds of short stories featuring portraits of fictional characters that were published? What role did cultural commentary on the symbolic function of portraiture in the nineteenth-century play? Is it possible to consider a daguerreoytpe portrait, a painted portrait, and a textual description of a portrait in a novel together? By not limiting my study of portraits by medium or generic form I have been able to provide a more nuanced account of the many ways portraits came to furnish meaning for nineteenth-century writers and artists, viewers and readers. In short, this book approaches portraiture as a method rather than as a set of objects.
Considering portraiture as a method also allows us to understand more fully why portraits were so compelling for writers and artists in the nineteenth century: as a way to both explore the changing relationship between external appearances and inner life and shape that relationship through the repeated picturing forth of new aesthetic hypotheses regarding subjectivity. The portrait offered a remarkably useful surface upon which to consider the relationship between exterior and interior, a relationship that also preoccupied thinkers central to the burgeoning new discipline of psychology during the same period. The parallel evolution of portrait conventions and psychological explanations of selfhood is vitally important but has generally been ignored. As I will argue, portraiture was a major engine driving the development of new ideas about human interiority during the nineteenth century: exponentially replicating images of external appearances inspired inventive aesthetic rumination about interior life.
The lively variety of portraiture as a method is often flattened in critical discussions. Scholars commonly look through portraits, in order to find out more about the person depicted, the world in which they lived, or the artist behind
them. Portraits are also often analyzed in relation to major aesthetic shifts in figurative representation (for example Pablo Picasso’s 1910 Portrait of Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler or Cindy Sherman’s groundbreaking late twentieth-century self-portraits). Yet when critics and scholars frame portraiture as illustrative and conventional, rather than as inventive, the agility of its speculative method gets lost or deemphasized. Portraiture—in its textual and visual manifestations—is always a mediating aesthetic. It does not merely illustrate or depict already existent ideas about the self. Nor does it merely express already-established beliefs about the relationship between surface and depth. Rather, portraiture also always calls attention to and makes visible the process by which that relationship comes to be through aesthetic representation. Portraits are often exercises in meta-representation. That is, they are representations of the concept of representation itself.⁸ And because the subject/object of portraiture is nothing less than the human itself, these refracted representations are always already redrawing the boundaries of subjectivity, and reconfiguring the relationship between inner life and external appearance. When portraiture is considered as a method, rather than a genre or discrete set of objects, we are better able to see the extent to which portraiture does not merely reflect or record, but rather crafts new frames, new structures through which subjectivity comes into focus.
The Spectacle of Expression
These new frames and structures are often difficult to describe or name. We see this specifically in the case of the term expression,
to which nineteenth-century writers often turned in order to describe an almost unnamable something
that is pictured forth upon a person’s face. Portraiture asserts the significance of expression
—or the bringing forth of the invisible human interior onto a visible, exterior surface—but refuses to define what it is. Nineteenth-century writers and artists considered expression
as a contact point between external appearance and inner life. As we saw