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The Morning Ride

American History Museum

The Morning Ride
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Object Details

maker

E.B. and E.C. Kellogg

Description

Sentimental genre prints documented the social image of Victorian virtue through domestic scenes of courtship, family, home life, and images of the “genteel female.” Children are depicted studying nature or caring for their obedient pets as they learn their place in the greater world. Romantic scenes picture devoted husbands with their contented, dutiful wives. In these prints, young women educated in reading, music, needlework, the arts, the language of flowers, basic math and science are subjugated to their family’s needs.
These prints became popular as lithography was introduced to 19th Century Americans. As a new art form, it was affordable for the masses and provided a means to share visual information by crossing the barriers of race, class and language. Sentimental prints encouraged the artistic endeavors of schoolgirls and promoted the ambitions of amateur artists, while serving as both moral instruction and home or business decoration. They are a pictorial record of our romanticized past.
This hand colored print is of a dark haired woman riding side-saddle on a dapple gray horse. The woman is wearing a long skirt, a vest, a jacket, a bowtie, a large collar and a cavalier hat with bows and feathers. She carries a riding crop in one hand and holds reins of the horse with the other. The bridle and saddle harness on the horse are decorated with fringe.
This print was produced by the lithographic firm E.B. & E.C. Kellogg. Edmund Burke Kellogg and Elijah Chapman Kellogg were younger brothers of the founder of the Kellogg lithography firm, Daniel Wright Kellogg. After Daniel Wright Kellogg moved west, his two brothers took over the family lithography firm in 1840 and changed the name to E.B. & E.C. Kellogg. They were responsible for the continued success of the family firm and involved in the partnerships with Horace Thayer in 1845/1846, John Chenevard Comstock in 1848 and William Henry Bulkeley in 1867.

Location

Currently not on view

Credit Line

Harry T. Peters "America on Stone" Lithography Collection

date made

ca 1859

ID Number

DL.60.2313

catalog number

60.2313

accession number

228146

maker number

75

Object Name

lithograph

Object Type

Lithograph

Physical Description

hand-colored (image production method/technique)
ink (overall material)
paper (overall material)

Measurements

image: 12 in x 8 1/2 in; 30.48 cm x 21.59 cm
overall: 14 in x 10 in; 35.56 cm x 25.4 cm

place made

United States: Connecticut, Hartford

Related Publication

Peters, Harry T.. America on Stone

See more items in

Home and Community Life: Domestic Life
Clothing & Accessories
Art
Peters Prints
Domestic Furnishings

Data Source

National Museum of American History

Subject

Horses
Adornment

depicted

Horseback Riding

Metadata Usage

CC0

Link to Original Record

https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a1-3c83-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

Record ID

nmah_324649

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