Frankliniana on Display
Having acquired French artist Jean Baptiste Weyler’s gorgeous portrait miniature of Benjamin Franklin in 2013, the Library Company needed to find a fitting way to display it. That challenge inspired us to consider putting more of our precious Franklin art and artifacts on permanent display. It turned out to be an easy step from envisioning the exhibition of the jeweled miniature to devoting the whole North wall of the Logan room to our founder.
To start, a glass case was installed to house our new acquisition and several related artifacts, including Franklin’s glass electrostatic tube (which generates static electricity when rubbed by a cloth or piece of leather), a magnifying mirror he gave to the Library in 1743, and two medals (Libertas Americana, commemorating the American victory during the revolution, and a Peace Medal handed out to Native Americans). The case includes space for one book and one print on a rotating basis. A snuff box Franklin commissioned in 1779 from François Dumont, with a portrait of himself, is also displayed in the case (housed in a new box designed to protect the delicate watercolor on ivory from light). William Bucher created new mounts that are painted to match the objects seamlessly, making each appear as if it were floating.
James Reid Lambdin (1807-1889). Benjamin Franklin, ca. 1880. Oil on canvas. Purchased by the Library Company, 1880.
Above the case hangs James Reid Lambdin’s copy of David Martin’s portrait of Franklin. But before it could be displayed, the painting first needed restoration. Painting conservator Carole Abercauph cleaned the canvas and mended two tears. Furniture conservator Bret Headley conserved the frame. It’s wonderful to have Dr. Franklin in the Logan room watching over his legacy!

Jean-Jacques Caffieri (1725-1792). Benjamin Franklin, ca. 1779-1784. Plaster. Gift of Walter Franklin, 1805.

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