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The Revolutionary Life & Times of American Black Artist Prince Demah

Please join

The Trent House Association

in partnership with

The Trenton Historical Society

 

Chances are you’ve never heard of Prince Demah, an enslaved portrait painter in colonial America. One of his three surviving paintings is in the collection of the Met. He was first a mariner and later served in the Massachusetts Militia as a cannon loader for Henry Knox’s artillery. His owner, a Loyalist Boston merchant, took him to England to get some training. He knew poet Phillis Wheatly and is the likely painter of a lost portrait which survives as an engraving that is the sole likeness we have of her.

This fascinating early American artist is one of the main subjects of Zara Anishanslin’s book, The Painter’s Fire. Join the Trent House Association and the Trenton Historical Society to hear her tell this fascinating story, Saturday, February 7th at 3pm. In a nod to our uncertain weather patterns, the presentation will be by Zoom. Registration is required with $15 admission at https://tinyurl.com/PrinceDemah

Registrants will be sent the Zoom link by noon on Saturday, February 7, and a link to the recorded presentation within 48 hours.

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