View from Monticello Looking Toward Charlottesville. Thomas Jefferson Foundation, Inc.

Artist/Maker: Jane Braddick Peticolas (1791-1852)

Created: 1825

Origin/Purchase: United States

Materials: watercolor on paper

Dimensions: 12 1/2 × 20 1/2 in.

Location: North Octagonal Room

Provenance: Ellen Wayles Randolph Coolidge; by descent to Catherine Coolidge Lastavica; by gift to the Thomas Jefferson Foundation in 1986

Accession Number: 1986-13-29

Historical Notes:  Monticello was only rarely depicted in Jefferson's lifetime. Consequently, this watercolor has become an important document recording the appearance of Monticello and its surrounding landscape. According to Ellen Randolph Coolidge's grandson, this watercolor of Monticello was painted for Mrs. Coolidge by her friend, the Richmond artist, Jane Braddick Peticolas.

The View from Monticello Looking Toward Charlottesville looks toward the small town of Charlottesville and a clearing showing the construction of the University of Virginia.

The artist Jane Pitford Braddick, probably of Scots descent, married Edward F. Peticolas (1793-ca. 1853), a painter and the second son of the established Richmond artist Philippe Abraham Peticolas on October 17, 1822.[1]

The Randolph daughters, who frequently visited cousins in Richmond, knew Jane Braddick when she ran a school in Richmond before her marriage to Peticolas. Virginia Randolph wrote:

I  hear'd with/ great surprise that Miss Braddick intended to break up her school and marry Mr. Petticola in the fall—hitherto I have believed her too ambitious if not too prudent to make this match, but Sister Ellen who knew her better expected it to take place. I feel interested in her fate, which will not at least be as forlorn as it has been, and I hope she may be happy.[2]

Although very little of her work is known, Mrs. Peticolas was chiefly recognized as a copyist of portraits. Her best known work is a copy of Cephas Thompson's portrait of John Marshall.

- Text from Stein, Worlds, 148 

References

  1. ^ See L. Moody Simms, Jr., "Talented Virginians: The Peticolas Family," The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 85 (January 1977): 55-64.
  2. ^ Randolph to Nicholas P. Trist, June 27, 1822, Nicholas P. Trist Papers, Library of Congress. Transcription available at Jefferson Quotes and Family Letters.