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Judge Samuel Sewall

John Smibert (American (born in Scotland), 1688–1751)
1729

Medium/Technique Oil on canvas
Dimensions 76.2 x 63.5 cm (30 x 25 in.)
Credit Line Bequest of William L. Barnard, by exchange, and Emily L. Ainsley Fund
Accession Number58.358
NOT ON VIEW
CollectionsAmericas
ClassificationsPaintings
Sewall (1652–1730) was among the leading jurists of Massachusetts, serving as chief justice of the Superior Court in the 1720s. Earlier in his career, Sewall presided over the 1692 Salem witch trials (and was the only one of the three judges to publicly recant his role in that event). Today, he is perhaps best known for his copious diary, which provides much critical information about personalities and events of the time. Smibert's portrait captures Sewall just months before his death, dressed in the sober colors befitting a judge and wearing the long, lacy tie that often appears in the artist's portraits of elderly men.

InscriptionsUpper spandrel: The Honble Samuel Sewall Esq Chief Justice ---- Of the --- Of Probate for the County Of Suffolk AEtatis 78
Lower spandrel: Auris Mens Oculus Manus Os Pes Munere Fungi Dum Pergunt Praestat Discere Velle Mori
ProvenanceThe artist; to the Rev. Joseph Sewall, the sitter's son, 1730; to Samuel Sewall, 1769; to Judge Samuel Sewall, 1776; to the Rev. Samuel Sewall, Burlington, Mass., 1814; to Samuel Sewall, 1866; to Nellie L. Sewall Bennet; Benjamin Flayderman, Boston, 1943; with Vose Galleries, Boston, 1957; to MFA, 1958, gift of WIlliam L. Barnard by exchange and purchase.