Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Working as a coppersmith in his hometown of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, Jacob Eichholtz aspired to be a portraitist, eventually giving up his metalwork business to focus on painting by 1811. Despite having essentially no formal training in the medium, Eichholtz progressed quickly, becoming one of the leading portrait painters in Philadelphia and nearby areas. These portraits of the family of Benjamin Schaum ( 1980.742 , 1980.744 , and 1980.745 ), a fellow resident and coppersmith in Lancaster, are examples of the artist’s early style. Eichholtz first mastered small, profile portraits like these, typically executed on wooden panels. Later he developed a more sophisticated handling of the figure, rendering larger-scale compositions on canvas of his sitters in three-quarter views.
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John Hoppner — Mrs. Thomas Pechell (Charlotte Clavering, die
William Woolley — Martha Washington
John Hoppner — Mrs. Richard Bache (Sarah Franklin, 1743–1808
Sir Henry Raeburn — Janet Law
Richard Collins — Portret van een vrouw
John Hoppner — Portrait of a Woman; (reverse, now covered by
John Westbrooke Chandler — Mrs. George Horsley (Charlotte Ma
Charles Howard Hodges — Quirina Catharina des H.R. Rijksbaro
Augustin de Saint-Aubin — Profile of a Lady in a Bonnet
Thomas Sully — Mrs. George Lingen
Portrait of a Woman (Mrs. Ann Hivlyn)