Lilly Martin Spencer, The Home of the Red, White, and Blue

Lilly Martin Spencer, The Home of the Red, White, and Blue, c. 1867–68, oil on canvas, 24 x 30 inches (Terra Foundation for American Art, Daniel J. Terra Art Acquisition Endowment Fund, 2007.1), a Seeing America video Speakers: Taylor Poulin, Assistant Curator, Terra Foundation for American Art, and Beth Harris

[0:00] [music]

Dr. Beth Harris: [0:06] We’re here in the galleries of the Art Institute of Chicago, looking at a painting by Lilly Martin Spencer. Now, although we’re in the Art Institute of Chicago, this particular painting happens to be in the collection of the Terra Foundation for American Art.

[0:21] The painting is called “The Home of the Red, White, and Blue.” This is much more than a simple genre painting.

Taylor Poulin: [0:28] This painting is rife with symbolism. At the very bottom, we can see an American flag that’s literally ripped in two. This painting was done between 1867 and 1868, mere years after the Civil War ended.

[0:41] You can see the red and the white stripes bunched together on the ground, and then the blue with the stars is sitting on a little bench.

Dr. Harris: [0:48] Surrounding that is a whole host of figures, but our eye is drawn primarily to the female figures here.

Taylor: [0:55] Our eye is immediately drawn to the woman in the center. She’s bathed in this beautiful golden light. That’s a self-portrait of the artist, Lilly Martin Spencer, and she’s surrounded by two of her children.

[1:05] The fact that she is dressed in white, and her older daughter is dressed in red and her younger daughter is dressed in blue is another aspect of the symbolic nature of this painting, and the statement that she’s trying to make about the United States at the time. The organ grinder and the young girl next to him are likely performing for this group.

Dr. Harris: [1:22] So we have the organ grinder, perhaps an Italian immigrant, and the red-haired woman on the right, who’s likely an Irish immigrant.

Taylor: [1:29] Lilly Martin Spencer herself was an immigrant. There’s an interesting statement here that the artist, I think, is trying to make. It has to do with the role of women and immigrants in the United States after the Civil War.

Dr. Harris: [1:43] The violence of the Civil War and the beginnings of Reconstruction were an enormously difficult period in American history. What would be the new role of African Americans in the country? And so many women had entered the workforce during the war and contributed to the war effort, many of them by sewing American flags, sewing uniforms, sewing caps.

[2:07] Those women returned to the home after the war, but felt this very patriotic connection to the Union, to helping to restore the United States.

Taylor: [2:18] We can see a very clear example of that in a few different places in this painting. You have a sewing kit at the very bottom, right in front of the flag. It looks like it’s just waiting to be used.

[2:29] Likewise, the woman in the center, in white, and her young daughter behind her in red both have thimbles on their middle fingers, another example of the work that they’re going to do to help restore the nation.

Dr. Harris: [2:40] This idea that through their domestic functions, women could contribute significantly to the development of the United States, toward the restoration of the Union.

Taylor: [2:52] That point is made even further by the husband who’s sitting at left, somewhat in shadow. He’s wearing what looks like a uniform.

[3:01] We think that he may have gone out to fight and come back injured. He’s got his crutches right behind him. She’s alluding to the fact that so many able-bodied young men came back from the war unable to help restore the country.

Dr. Harris: [3:15] What’s so wonderful about this painting, too, is all of the generations that have come together. We have an older woman, an older gentleman, the maternal figure of the artist herself with her children, the nursemaid, and then the American flag conveying this idea that it is the American family that will lead the country into the future.

Taylor: [3:36] Here we have this wonderful example of how women in particular could contribute to the recreation of a country that had been torn apart.

Dr. Harris: [3:45] Although Lilly Martin Spencer was essentially self-trained, this is an expertly painted canvas. We have a composition where the figures form a pyramid, and our eye is drawn immediately into that central figure of the woman in white.

[4:01] The narrative is very easy to follow, and the way that she’s painted the fabrics of the dresses, the aprons, even the trees and the atmospheric perspective that we see in the background, these are things that male artists learned at the academic schools and that here she’s learned on her own.

Taylor: [4:18] In fact, she was offered the opportunity to travel both abroad and to New England to learn with artists like Washington Allston.

[4:26] She said, “No, I want to stay here in the Midwest.” Lilly Martin Spencer had seven children of her own. She was able to recreate the nuances of young children being cranky or fearful or shy. I think these are emotions that all people can relate to.

Dr. Harris: [4:43] Considering this young American democracy, creating an art for the public was such an important ideal.

Taylor: [4:52] It’s just such a really beautiful expression of her integrating her family life into this work that she hoped to sell.

Dr. Harris: [5:00] I just so admire her ambition. Apparently, at a very young age she announced to her parents, “I’m going to be a painter,” and held on to that ideal with such tenacity through 13 children, through a marriage, through the difficulties of finding patrons and buyers in the mid-19th century.

[5:20] It’s wonderful to stand here and look at this painting by such a remarkable woman.

[5:25] [music]

Smarthistory images for teaching and learning:

[flickr_tags user_id=”82032880@N00″ tags=”SpencerFlag,”]

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Cite this page as: Taylor L. Poulin and Dr. Beth Harris, "Lilly Martin Spencer, The Home of the Red, White, and Blue," in Smarthistory, March 12, 2020, accessed July 26, 2024, https://smarthistory.org/spencer-red-white-and-blue/.