Portrait of a Creole Woman with Madras Tignon (c. 1837) is an oil painting traditionally attributed to George Catlin. It is best known from a c. 1915 copy made by Frank Schneider, an art restorer working for the Louisiana State Museum. The portrait was historically known as Portrait of Marie Laveau as it was presumed to depict Louisiana VoodoopriestessMarie Laveau. Long thought to be lost, the painting resurfaced in 2022 when it was sold at auction for US$984,000.
The three-quarter painting shows an unknown free Creole of color woman wearing a multicolor tignon and a red shawl. It includes a signature at the upper right "G. Catlin Nlle Orléans / mai 1837".[1] Despite the sitter being identified as Laveau, and Catlin having spent time in New Orleans during her lifetime,[2] there are no records of him having met or painted her.[3]
History
The earliest records for the painting come from 1912 when the Board of Curators of the Louisiana State Museum reported on artwork loaned to the museum for exhibition at the Cabildo. Among the items loaned by New Orleans entrepreneur and collector Gaspar Cusachs, who contributed a number of paintings, artifacts, and curios to the new museum, was an oil painting recorded as "Portrait, Marie Laveau, by C. Catlin, 1833, 18×25" [sic].[4]
In 1922, Maison Blanche co-owner Simon J. Shwartz acquired the painting,[5] displaying it in a small gallery on the department store's fourth floor as "Marie Laveau by Catlin" until he sold the painting to Louisiana Historical Society president Edward Alexander Parsons in 1933.[6][7] Parsons returned the painting to the Louisiana State Museum,[8][9] but the identification of the portrait was less certain. The 1934 guide book for the museum identified the painting as "Marie Laveau or Choctaw Woman," and by 1941 the attribution to Catlin was also in dispute.[10][11]
By 1947, the painting was no longer on display at the Cabildo, having been reclaimed by Parsons[6] and eventually presumed lost until it appeared in May 2022 at Brunk Auctions in Asheville, North Carolina.[1] Listed with an expected sale price of $200,000–300,000, the painting was purchased by the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond, Virginia for $984,000.[12]
Attribution
A report on the painting commissioned by the auction house investigated the history of the painting, but found no mention of the work in Catlin's records. In addition, the researcher noted that the painting and signature were both inconsistent with Catlin's style.[3] While Catlin did travel along the Mississippi in the 1830s, his travel accounts do not directly mention Marie Laveau nor his painting any free women of color in New Orleans.[13] Susan Rawles, an associate curator at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, noted that the portrait is reflective of French academic styles, and pointed to research indicating it should be attributed to Jacques Amans due to consistencies with his style, as well as the technique and materials he was known to use.[3][14]
Sometime around 1915, while the original painting was on loan to the Louisiana State Museum, museum employee Frank Schneider (1881–1935) painted a copy of it.[3] Schneider joined the staff of the Louisiana State Museum as curator of the art collection (as well as the museum's taxidermist) around 1914 and he restored and copied a number of paintings loaned to the museum.[20]
Once the original was no longer available, Schneider's copy, identified as "Portrait of Marie Laveau" continued to be displayed in the museum.[3] In 1988, when a fire swept through the Cabildo, the painting suffered some damage that required restoration work.[3][21]
With the original painting lost for over 80 years, Schneider's copy became one of the most widely known paintings allegedly depicting Marie Laveau;[6][22] folklorist Zora Neale Hurston specifically mentions the portrait in her 1931 essay "Hoodoo in America".[23] The Schneider copy has been used as the inspiration for some modern reimaginations of Marie Laveau.[24][25][26]
^"George Catlin Artist Timeline". Richmond, Virginia: Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. January 21, 2015. p. VMFA Educational Resources. Retrieved August 6, 2023.
^ abcdLong, Carolyn Morrow (2006). A New Orleans Voudou Priestess: The Legend and Reality of Marie Laveau. Gainesville, Florida: University Press of Florida. p. 57. ISBN978-0-8130-2974-0.
^"Gallery Buys Painting of Old Voodoo Queen". The Indianapolis Times. Vol. 45, no. 109. United Press. September 15, 1933. p. 25. Archived from the original on August 4, 2023. Retrieved August 4, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
^Writer's Program of the Work Projects Administration (1945) [1941]. Louisiana: A Guide to the State (Third Printing). New York, New York: Hastings House. p. 163. ISBN9781603540179. Archived from the original on August 4, 2023. Retrieved August 4, 2023 – via Google Books. A painting, signed by Catlin and said to be of Marie Laveau, the voodoo queen, is extant. Both the signature and the identity of the sitter, however, have been questioned. In this connection it is amusing to note that at least four different portraits, which do not in the least resemble each other, have been claimed as likenesses of Marie; and it has become something of a joke in New Orleans that the owner of any unidentified portrait of a woman of color with her head wrapped in a tignon will almost invariably put forth a similar claim.