2006.9 Adolf Ulric Wertmüller, Mrs. Sims of Philadelphia


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
The portrait of Mrs. Sims is a marvelous example of 18th-century portraiture as practiced in Europe and imported into America by ambitious itinerant painters. The detail of the sitter's highly finished coiffure, Empire-waist gown, and embroidered cloak attests to the artist's skill, as do the bold scarlet accents playing against the cool, neutral background.

Sweden's most successful 18th-century painter, Adolf Ulric Wertmüller trained at the Royal Academy in Stockholm but made his career in France. The changing political climate of the 1790s forced the expatriate painter abroad to Spain and finally to Philadelphia in 1794. Once settled in the cultural capital of the United States, Wertmüller painted George Washington, as well as other notable Philadelphia sitters.

Excerpt from
William Keyse Rudolph, DMA label text, 2006

NOTES
Created in 1808

Object File reviewed

From outline by Sara Woodbury, 2010-11 McDermott Intern, January 5, 2011
Rebecca Heath Sims (1769-October 25, 1830), wife of Joseph Sims
  • Children: Wooddrop Sims (1796-1814)
  • Unfortunately little is known about Rebecca Sims herself, at least nothing that has been published. We do, however, know more about her husband, Joseph Sims 
  • Joseph Sims (1760-1851) 
    • "Well-known and once opulent" Philadelphia merchant
    • Store located at Pine and Water Street
    • Sims also owned own wharf an dock, and possessed some of the largest ships in the merchant marine
      • Two of his trading ships included the Rebecca Sims and Wooddrop Sims
        • Sims employed his ships in tea trade and other "East India Luxuries"
        • Rebecca Sims was refurbished a whaler, and in 1861 became one of the ships used in the "Stone Fleet" during the Civil War, when several ships were filled with stone and sunk to order to obstruct the major shipping canals in the South.
      • Lived in at least two three-story brick mansions
        • First one located at Third below Pine, next to St. Peter's Church
        • Second one located at Ninth and Chestnut. 
      • Country estate located at Laurel, which would eventually become Laurel Hill Cemetery, one of the earliest garden cemeteries in the United States
      • In short, the Sims were both wealthy and well-known on the Philadelphia scene. Given their prosperity during this period, it is possible, though unproven, that Rebecca's clothes were imported from France itself.
      • Nothing lasts forever though, and Joseph Sims appears to have eventually lost most of his fortune, though he managed to end his days in reasonable comfort; 'But, alas! Strong as his mountain, the stronger current of adversity swept it even to the valley of humiliation, and the crisis of 1823 gave his possessions to the other owners...the rest of the property was scattered by, and to his creditors, and left him destitute for many years; but before his close of life, he was absolved of the penalty of poverty, by befitting returns to his waning years." 

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers
Wertmuller, Adolf Ulric (Swedish, 1751-1811)

Cultures

Geography 
Place of origin: Philadelphia (Pennsylvania/United States): TGN: 7014406

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
From 1808: Mrs. Joseph Sims, Philadelphia  
n.d.: private dealer, New York
From 2006: Dallas Museum of Art, Beatrice and Patrick Haggerty Acquisition Fund

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

IMAGE ASSETS

WEB RESOURCES 

ARCHIVAL RESOURCES

FUN FACTS

TEACHING IDEAS

RULES
Apply to objects where number equals 2006.9

Category
rules_operator
AND
General Description
 
The portrait of Mrs. Sims is a marvelous example of 18th-century portraiture as practiced in Europe and imported into America by ambitious itinerant painters. The detail of the sitter's highly finished coiffure, Empire-waist gown, and embroidered cloak attests to the artist's skill, as do the bold scarlet accents playing against the cool, neutral background.

Sweden's most successful 18th-century painter, Adolf Ulric Wertmüller trained at the Royal Academy in Stockholm but made his career in France. The changing political climate of the 1790s forced the expatriate painter abroad to Spain and finally to Philadelphia in 1794. Once settled in the cultural capital of the United States, Wertmüller painted George Washington, as well as other notable Philadelphia sitters.

Excerpt from
William Keyse Rudolph, DMA label text, 2006

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 

Notes
Created in 1808

Object File reviewed

From outline by Sara Woodbury, 2010-11 McDermott Intern, January 5, 2011
Rebecca Heath Sims (1769-October 25, 1830), wife of Joseph Sims
  • Children: Wooddrop Sims (1796-1814)
  • Unfortunately little is known about Rebecca Sims herself, at least nothing that has been published. We do, however, know more about her husband, Joseph Sims 
  • Joseph Sims (1760-1851) 
    • "Well-known and once opulent" Philadelphia merchant
    • Store located at Pine and Water Street
    • Sims also owned own wharf an dock, and possessed some of the largest ships in the merchant marine
      • Two of his trading ships included the Rebecca Sims and Wooddrop Sims
        • Sims employed his ships in tea trade and other "East India Luxuries"
        • Rebecca Sims was refurbished a whaler, and in 1861 became one of the ships used in the "Stone Fleet" during the Civil War, when several ships were filled with stone and sunk to order to obstruct the major shipping canals in the South.
      • Lived in at least two three-story brick mansions
        • First one located at Third below Pine, next to St. Peter's Church
        • Second one located at Ninth and Chestnut. 
      • Country estate located at Laurel, which would eventually become Laurel Hill Cemetery, one of the earliest garden cemeteries in the United States
      • In short, the Sims were both wealthy and well-known on the Philadelphia scene. Given their prosperity during this period, it is possible, though unproven, that Rebecca's clothes were imported from France itself.
      • Nothing lasts forever though, and Joseph Sims appears to have eventually lost most of his fortune, though he managed to end his days in reasonable comfort; 'But, alas! Strong as his mountain, the stronger current of adversity swept it even to the valley of humiliation, and the crisis of 1823 gave his possessions to the other owners...the rest of the property was scattered by, and to his creditors, and left him destitute for many years; but before his close of life, he was absolved of the penalty of poverty, by befitting returns to his waning years." 

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers
Wertmuller, Adolf Ulric (Swedish, 1751-1811)

Cultures

Geography 
Place of origin: Philadelphia (Pennsylvania/United States): TGN: 7014406

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
From 1808: Mrs. Joseph Sims, Philadelphia  
n.d.: private dealer, New York
From 2006: Dallas Museum of Art, Beatrice and Patrick Haggerty Acquisition Fund

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

rules
Apply To
Objects
number
Equals
2006.9
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
women: AAT: 300025943
%Archived
earrings (jewelry): AAT: 300045998
*American Art
@Russell
Philadelphia (Pennsylvania/United States): TGN: 7014406
red (color): AAT: 300126225
hats (headgear): AAT: 300046106
flowers (plants): AAT: 300132399
turbans: AAT: 300046127
dresses (garments): AAT: 300046159
portrait: AAT: 300015637
shawls (perraje / outwear): AAT: 300209991
three-quarter views: AAT: 300117363
Empire (style): AAT: 300021269
Wertmüller_Adolf Ulric: ULAN: 500000778
source file
object_notes_3_a-0479.xml.nores