Title | The Battle of Chapultepec (Storming of Chapultepec) |
Artist/Maker | James Walker ( 1819 - 1889 ) |
Date | 1858 |
Medium | Oil on canvas |
Dimensions | h. 93.5 x w. 210 in. (h. 237.5 x w. 533.4 cm) |
Credit Line | U.S. Senate Collection |
Accession Number | 33.00010.000 |
In 1857, as part of Captain Montgomery C. Meigs’s program to decorate rooms in the newly constructed Capitol extension, James Walker was commissioned to recount in oil on canvas the American capture of the Mexican fortress at Chapultepec. The commission’s execution was briefly delayed when Congress passed a bill requiring that all works of art for the extension be selected by a commission of three distinguished artists and approved by the Joint Committee on the Library. The project proceeded, however, and the painting was delivered to the Capitol in 1862. Walker received $6,137.37 for his work. Evidence suggests that the picture was originally commissioned for use in the meeting room of the House Military Affairs Committee. However, with the decision to engage Seth Eastman to create the series of fort pictures for that space, The Battle of Chapultepec was relocated to the west staircase of the Senate wing. In 1982 the painting was loaned to the Marine Corps Museum at the Washington Navy Yard in Washington, D.C.
Born in England, artist James Walker spent most of his life in New York City but was living in Mexico City at the outbreak of the Mexican War. He was forced into hiding for six weeks until he eventually made his way behind American lines. Walker subsequently served as an interpreter for U.S. troops and was present at the storming of Chapultepec. Therefore, he was uniquely qualified to undertake this commission. His composition shows the consultation between General John Anthony Quitman, who led the storming of Chapultepec, and the officers of his advanced division prior to the attack. Walker’s treatment of details, including military uniforms, is highly accurate. His other military history paintings include The Battle of Lookout Mountain and The Battle of Gettysburg.