Zedikiah Belknap
Portrait of Sarah Dodge
Massachusetts, 1824
Oil on wooden panel, painted in Sutton, Massachusetts, with strong attribution to Zedikiah Belknap (1781–1858).
On the reverse, inscribed in red paint-likely in Belknap’s own hand: "Mifs Sarah Dodge, age 23, AD 1824." The use of the long ‘S’ in Miss carries over from 18th century conventions.
Sarah Dodge (born 1801) came from a prominent Massachusetts family and was related to Edward Rawson, the first Secretary of the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
Born in Auburn, Massachusetts,
Zedikiah Belknap graduated from Dartmouth College in 1807. Despite having no formal art training, he became an itinerant portrait painter, working in Vermont, New Hampshire, New York City, and Massachusetts. He depicts Sarah in a half-length pose, slightly turned, wearing an elaborate sheer lace collar, a flowing shawl, and a fashionable hairstyle with striking curls. The quality (and then expense) of a portrait like this suggests it may have been commissioned for Sarah’s engagement or wedding.
The portrait shows beautifully. It has been professionally cleaned, with some touchup, primarily the blush on her right cheek. Housed in a fine period molded gilt frame about 33 5/8 inches tall × 28 ¼ inches wide. From a fine Northeast collection.