Portrait of a Free Woman of Color by François Fleischbein - 1833-1835 - 26 x 21 in New Orleans Museum of Art Portrait of a Free Woman of Color by François Fleischbein - 1833-1835 - 26 x 21 in New Orleans Museum of Art

Portrait of a Free Woman of Color

oil on canvas • 26 x 21 in
  • François Fleischbein - 1804 - 1868 François Fleischbein 1833-1835

We present today's painting thanks to New Orleans Museum of Art. Enjoy! :)

Shortly after the Louisiana Purchase of 1803, German-born artist François Fleischbein immigrated to New Orleans to paint portraits that reflected the city’s great cultural diversity. The Free Woman of Color pictured here was part of a dynamic, multiracial culture in New Orleans in which people of color often had significant rights and freedoms, especially when compared to the rest of the United States. The portrait’s simplicity and naturalism reflected new trends in European art of the time, and the portrait’s sitter likely regarded the painting’s straightforward artistic style as a mark of worldliness and sophistication. The portrait also reflects the influence of photography—like many portrait painters of the time, Fleischbein was also a photographer, and opened a gallery specializing in daguerreotypes and ambrotypes in the Marigny district in the 1850s.

P.S. A queen within! Meet seven fashionable personalities presented on an exhibition in NOMA earlier in the year.