Lot Details & Additional Photographs
Pastel on paper, unsigned, retaining label to verso, presented in an oval wood frame.
Sheet size 9 1/2 x 7 1/2 in.; Frame dimensions 11 1/4 x 9 1/4 in.
The Estate of the late Dr. Larry Southworth, Fredericksburg, Virginia Purchased from Mrs. Wilkins Sanders, whose husband descended from the Tabbs of Gloucester County, Virginia.
Acquired Motley's Auction, Richmond, Virginia.
The Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts, Winston Salem, North Carolina, recorded data and photographs of this painting in 1975, under reference number S-5042. It was examined by Bradford L. Rauschenberg, Frank L. Horton, and Ann W. Dibble.
The subject, Andrew Van Bibber (1802-1842), lived at “North End,” North River, Gloucester County, Virginia. He was the brother of Hester Van Bibber, who married Dr. Henry Wythe Tabb.
The son and student of James Sharples, Felix Sharples left England with his family in 1794. They arrived in New York, where James Sharples started working, and by 1797, the family was living in Philadelphia. In 1811, James Shaprles died, and his wife and two of the children returned to England. However, Felix remained in the United States to work as a pastel portrait artist until his death at age 44. He resided in Virginia and North Carolina from 1806 to at least 1824.
Between 1808 and 1811, Felix Sharples had executed pastels in Norfolk, Suffolk, and many of the Tidewater counties. As security for money borrowed, he left a large collection of pastels by himself and other members of his family, which formed the core of the Sharples Collection in Independence Hall. His original painting of James Monroe is in the National Portrait Gallery.
Several tears and significant spotting to the upper margin, toning to the sheet.