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Christian Gullager
(1759–1826)
Sarah Woodhull Forman (1781–1811)
Oil on canvas, 37 × 27 inches
Label (handwritten in ink) on verso: “Portrait of-/Sarah Woodhull For[man]/born
1781,died 1811./Mrs. Forman holding a book of music, as she composed music/Painted
by Christian Gallagher./in circa 1797.”
Label (handwritten in ink) on verso: “Sara Woodhull Father’s/Aunt,/married
Col. Forman”
The portraitist Christian Gullager was born in Copenhagen, the son of a servant
in the household of a high-ranking government official and print collector.
Gullager studied at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts there and was awarded a
silver medal in 1780. He immigrated to the United States and was first documented
in Newburyport, Massachusetts, in 1786, the year of his marriage. He was listed
in the Boston directory in 1789 as a portrait painter and made two professional
trips to Worcester that year. He also worked as scenery painter for the Federal
Street Theatre. Gullager relocated to New York in 1797 and advertised himself
as a painter of portraits and theater scenery. He soon moved to Philadelphia,
where he was listed in the city directories from 1798 to 1805, the last three
years as a miniature painter. William Dunlap recorded that Gullager was working
as a theater scenery painter in New York in 1806, but was dismissed because
of his “taste for lounging.”1 According to Philadelphia County records, Gullager’s
wife obtained a divorce from him on December 27, 1809. Nothing is known about
the artist’s activities until his death in 1826.
Marvin Sadik has noted that during his early Boston period Gullager adapted
his “provincial Danish portrait style to the kind of American primitive portraiture
being plied in New England during the third quarter of the eighteenth century” by
artists such as Winthrop Chandler (1747–1790).2 By the time Gullager left
Boston he had developed an elegant rococo style that Dunlap characterized as “a
dashy, sketchy manner,” adding that he “had been well instructed in the rudiments
of drawing.”3
The sitter Sarah Woodhull was born on March 28, 1781, in Freehold, Monmouth
County, New Jersey. She was the only daughter of Reverend John Woodhull, who
served as minister of Old Tennent Presbyterian Church from 1778 to 1824 and
operated a classical academy in Freehold. Sarah Woodhull married Major William
Gordon Forman, also of Freehold, in 1806. It is said that her dowry was $80,000.4
A graduate of the College of New Jersey (renamed Princeton University in
1896), he became a lawyer and eventually moved to Natchez, Mississippi, where
his family owned an estate. He is credited with having introduced Eli Whitney’s
cotton gin to Mississippi and was Speaker of the House in the Territorial Legislature
of Mississippi in 1803. Sarah Woodhull died in Natchez on November 13, 1811.
Her husband was murdered by robbers the following year in Lexington, Kentucky,
while he was taking their only child, Sarah Marsh Forman, to New Jersey.5
Although no evidence survives to verify that the sitter was a composer, as
the inscription states, the allusion to her interest in music indicates that
she was an educated and accomplished woman, as one would expect of the marriageable
young daughter of a prominent clergyman and educator. Gullager may have executed
this portrait of Sarah Woodhull during the late 1790s, around the time he painted
a portrait of her elder brother Reverend George Spafford Woodhull which is
owned by the Princeton University Art Museum.6
Copyright ©2005 The Schwarz Gallery
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