Mr. Lincoln sits for his portrait: the story of a photograph that became an American icon

Book Cover
Average Rating
Publisher
Farrar Straus Giroux
Publication Date
2023.
Language
English

Description

Mr. Lincoln Sits for His Portrait is a unique middle-grade depiction of America’s sixteenth president, through the story of one famous photograph, written by award-winning author Leonard S. Marcus. On February 9, 1864, Abraham Lincoln made the mile-long walk from the Executive Mansion to photographer Mathew Brady's Washington, DC, studio, to be joined there later by his ten-year-old son, Tad. With a fractious re-election campaign looming that year, America's first media-savvy president was intent on securing another portrait that cast him in a favorable light, as he prepared to make the case for himself to a nation weary of war. At least four iconic pictures were made that day. One was Lincoln in profile, the image that later found its way onto the penny; two more would be adapted for the 1928 and 2008 five-dollar bills. The fourth was a dual portrait of Lincoln and Tad. The pose, featuring Lincoln reading to his son, was a last-minute improvisation, but the image that came of it was—and remains—incomparably tender and enduringly powerful. Immediately after the president’s murder the following year, the picture of Lincoln reading to his son became a mass-produced icon—a cherished portrait of a nation’s fallen leader, a disarmingly intimate record of a care-worn father's feeling for his child, and a timeless comment on books as a binding force between generations.

Table of Contents

From the Book - First edition.

Rider in the Woods
A Face to the World
The Future in Focus
City Under Construction
The Artist in the White House
February 9th : The President's Morning
February 9th : The President's Afternoon
Images on the March
Afterglow.

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Author Notes

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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

It's become iconographic, the famous photographic portrait of President Abraham Lincoln reading to his then 10-year-old son, the mischievous Tad. Taken on February 9, 1864, it shows Lincoln seated in profile facing right with Tad standing by his father's left arm. Lincoln is wearing his reading glasses (a unique touch) and balancing a large book on his knee. Most viewers incorrectly presumed the book was the Family Bible; it was, instead, a Brady catalog. The indefatigable Marcus uses the photograph and the occasion of its being taken as a jumping off point for this fascinating, anecdote-rich profile of the sixteenth president. It turns out, Marcus asserts, that Lincoln loved the camera. From his first portrait in 1846 or 1847 to 1865, more than 100 followed, a generous handful of which are reproduced along with many other archival photographs in this handsome book. Indeed, Lincoln was among the first public figures to use photographs to present himself. They portrayed a man whose enemies cruelly likened to a great baboon; Lincoln himself regarded his visage self-deprecatingly, while a contemporary artist hauntingly described the face as being "the saddest I ever knew." Marcus' latest is exceedingly well written and unfailingly interesting, bringing Lincoln into vivid focus. The book will be useful in the classroom, of course, but is even better for independent reading.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Kirkus Book Review

A provocative study of Abraham Lincoln as a masterly media manipulator. Infusing his typically clear and well-reasoned discourse with modern-sounding language, Marcus presents Lincoln as an early adopter of new technology, being one of the first public figures to understand the power of photography and who "loved the camera" enough to leave over 100 surviving portraits. Based on a broad array of period illustrations, looking at six iconic photos taken in Matthew Brady's Washington, D.C., studio on Feb. 9, 1864 (and, in greater focus, at one in particular), he offers a visually based overview of the 16th president's political career--from the earliest likeness in 1846 and an 1860 Brady shot that boosted his first national campaign by going "viral" both as a carte de visite and "morphed" into a line engraving for Harper's Weekly--on to post-assassination memorial images. (The author makes no mention of various and possibly spurious deathbed photos.) Aside from confusingly characterizing the Emancipation Proclamation as "a watershed moment in human history" a few pages after dubbing it just "a symbolic statement" like the finishing of the Capitol's dome, Marcus offers readers deeply enlightening views of presidential achievements and daily routines, of the era's unfinished and chaotic Washington, D.C., and of Brady and other artists who depicted the president in various media. Everyone in the pictures is White except in occasional racially mixed engravings of crowd scenes. A fresh angle offering yet another reason to regard Lincoln as our presidential G.O.A.T. (timelines, bibliography, notes, photo credits, index) (Biography. 11-14) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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Booklist Reviews

*Starred Review* It's become iconographic, the famous photographic portrait of President Abraham Lincoln reading to his then 10-year-old son, the mischievous Tad. Taken on February 9, 1864, it shows Lincoln seated in profile facing right with Tad standing by his father's left arm. Lincoln is wearing his reading glasses (a unique touch) and balancing a large book on his knee. Most viewers incorrectly presumed the book was the Family Bible; it was, instead, a Brady catalog. The indefatigable Marcus uses the photograph and the occasion of its being taken as a jumping off point for this fascinating, anecdote-rich profile of the sixteenth president. It turns out, Marcus asserts, that Lincoln loved the camera. From his first portrait in 1846 or 1847 to 1865, more than 100 followed, a generous handful of which are reproduced along with many other archival photographs in this handsome book. Indeed, Lincoln was among the first public figures to use photographs to present himself. They portrayed a man whose enemies cruelly likened to a great baboon; Lincoln himself regarded his visage self-deprecatingly, while a contemporary artist hauntingly described the face as being "the saddest I ever knew." Marcus' latest is exceedingly well written and unfailingly interesting, bringing Lincoln into vivid focus. The book will be useful in the classroom, of course, but is even better for independent reading. Grades 4-7. Copyright 2023 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2023 Booklist Reviews.
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