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Liberty, in the Form of the Goddess of Youth: Giving Support to the Bald Eagle
Liberty, in the Form of the Goddess of Youth: Giving Support to the Bald Eagle
Image © Worcester Art Museum, all rights reserved.

Liberty, in the Form of the Goddess of Youth: Giving Support to the Bald Eagle

Artist (American, 1761–1817)
Date1796
Mediumstipple engraving on cream laid paper
Dimensions62 x 37.9 cm (image), 64 x 42.5 cm (sheet)
ClassificationsPrints
Credit LineMrs. Kingsmill Marrs Collection
Object number1925.1045
Label TextBorn in Princeton, Massachusetts, Savage was one of many artist-entrepreneurs of the early Federal period in America. He was the proprietor of a succession of galleries in Philadelphia, New York, and Boston, where he exhibited his own paintings and patriotic prints. In Philadelphia, on June 11, 1796, the artist published this reduced version of one of his canvases. Clad in flowing white draperies and a garland of spring flowers, the newly embodied goddess tramples the symbols of monarchy: a key, the medal and garter of a royal order, and a broken scepter. The eagle, symbol of the Republic, descends on shafts of light, to be nourished by Liberty. The flag of the union, topped by a liberty cap, is visible through the clouds of war, which spew lightning to drive the British fleet from Boston harbor. The popularity of Savage's composition in its day is reflected by many printed copies. This image was even translated into needlework, as seen in an embroidery in the Museum's collection made in 1804 by sixteen-year-old Mary Green of Worcester (acc. no. 1963.86).
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