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Frederick Douglass Portrait Analysis

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George Francis Schreiber’s portrait of Frederick Douglass from April 16, 1870, depicts Douglass in a suit and a vest while looking to his left. In the picture, Douglass is holding Abraham Lincoln’s cane. The general description of the portrait explains that Douglass created his own aesthetic. At this point, Douglass was now an elder statesman and can be depicted looking up and away from the camera lens in a “visionary gaze,” which works to confirm that his resistance was important for his own development, but also for the progression of the process of emancipation. He presented himself as dignified, respectable, and almost never smiled, as a form of resistance. Before the war, Douglass often made direct eye contact, staring challengingly

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