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PORTRAIT OF A BOY ATTRIBUTED TO RUTH AND/OR SAMUEL SHUTE (NEW ENGLAND, 1ST HALF-19TH CENTURY).

Currency:USD Category:Antiques Start Price:NA Estimated At:20,000.00 - 30,000.00 USD
PORTRAIT OF A BOY ATTRIBUTED TO RUTH AND/OR SAMUEL SHUTE (NEW ENGLAND, 1ST HALF-19TH CENTURY).

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Auction Date:2011 Nov 25 @ 14:00 (UTC-5 : EST/CDT)
Location:2690 Stratford Road, Delaware, Ohio, 43015, United States
PORTRAIT OF A BOY ATTRIBUTED TO RUTH AND/OR SAMUEL SHUTE (NEW ENGLAND, 1ST HALF-19TH CENTURY).
Oil on canvas, unsigned. Boy wearing a yellow vest seated in a rose garden. As found condition. Original ogee frame, 29 1/2"h. 25 1/2"w.

Ruth Whittier (b. 1803 in Dover, New Hampshire, d. 1882 in Louisville, Kentucky) and Samuel Addison Shute (b. 1803 in Byfield, Massachusetts, d. in Concord, New Hampshire) were married in 1827, living in Weare, New Hampshire. Both were itinerant artists who traveled through New England. The couple moved to Champlain, New York in 1834, but upon Samuel's death in 1836, Ruth returned to Concord, New Hampshire. In 1840, she married Alpha Tarbell and they moved to Louisville, Kentucky, where Ruth died in 1882. The family remains in Kentucky to today, including Ruth's great great granddaughter, who owns portraits of her grandmother and great-grandmother, both of which include roses identicial to those in the portrait offered here.

The subject of this portrait is unknown, but an almost identical portrait of an unidentified boy, possibly a brother, wearing the same vest and seated in a rose garden with a book is attributed to the Shutes (by Helen Kellogg) and is in the collection of the Shelburne Museum, Vermont.

Descriptions provided in both printed and on-line catalogue formats do not include condition reports. The absence of a condition statement does not imply that the lot is in perfect condition or completely free from wear and tear, imperfections or the effects of aging. Interested bidders are strongly encouraged to request a condition report on any lots upon which they intend to bid, prior to placing a bid. All transactions are governed by our Conditions of Sale.