Abigail’s work is defined by its painter sensibility — an enduring influence on generations that followed. Most artists are dead; following is a declaration of love.

Chair Seat
Abigail Davenport Williams (American, 1696–1766) Probably Stamford, Connecticut, United States

Chair Seat
Abigail Davenport Williams (American, 1696–1766) Probably Stamford, Connecticut, United States

Abigail Inskeep Bradford
Rembrandt Peale (American, 1778–1860)

Abigail Chesebrough (Mrs. Alexander Grant)
Joseph Blackburn (English, active in British colonies in North America and Bermuda, 1752–64)

Abigail
Maarten van Heemskerck Netherlandish, 1498-1574

Armchair
Design attributed to Francis H. Bacon (American, 1856–1940) A. H. Davenport & Company (American, 1875–1910) Boston

Abigail Before David
Lucas van Leyden Netherlandish, c. 1494-1533

Saint William of Maleval
After Salvator Rosa Italian, 1615-1673 Carlo Antonini ? c.1740 - c.1784

Women Fighting
William Rothenstein English, 1872-1945

Alice
William Merritt Chase (American, 1849–1916)

James William Wallack
Charles Robert Leslie American, born England, 1794–1859

The Circle of the Thieves; Agnolo Brunelleschi Attacked by a Six-Footed Serpent. Inferno, canto XXV
William Blake English, 1757-1827

A City Park
William Merritt Chase (American, 1849–1916)

At Mouquin's
William Glackens (American, 1870–1938)

Colinet Mocked by Two Boys, from The Pastorals of Virgil
William Blake English, 1757-1827

Maine Landscape
William Zorach American, 1887-1966

It's a New Age
Sue Williams American, born 1954

William Bonham
William Bonnell American, 1804–1865

J. Ellis Bonham
William Bonnell American, 1804–1865

The Bathers
William Adolphe Bouguereau (French, 1825–1905)