A Master of Folk Art Music: Elizabeth (Libba) Cotton

Several pieces selected from the GW Collection of artwork are now on display in the Luther W. Brady Art Gallery through December 16, 2023. In GW Collection: Faculty Selection, 10 professors from the Corcoran School of Art and Design respond to the works they chose in relation to their artistic practice, pedagogical approach, or personal interests. Director of the Corcoran School and Professor of Music Lauren Onkey chose to highlight a photograph of the legendary folk singer Elizabeth (Libba) Cotten. The portrait by Brian Lanker “radiates the joy and history embedded in her music,” Onkey writes in the accompanying text.

Born near Chapel Hill, North Carolina in 1893, Cotten taught herself how to play her brother’s right-handed banjo with the opposite hand, which she played backward without restringing. Elizabeth Cotten left school to work after the third grade. Making 75 cents a month cleaning houses and cooking, she saved up the $3.75 required to purchase her own guitar from a local dry-goods store. With determination and self-reliance, Cotten developed a unique picking style characterized by simple figures played on the bass strings with her fingers in counterpoint to a melody played on the treble strings with her thumb. Despite criticism from other guitarists, Elizabeth Cotten took pride in her distinctive inverted technique, creating what decades later became known as the “Cotten style.” 

Elizabeth Cotten was married and had a daughter in her mid-teens. As she became immersed in family life, religion began driving a wedge between Cotten and her blossoming music career. At the recommendation of her church community, Elizabeth Cotten stopped playing her “worldly” guitar music. Ironically, many of Cotten’s songs express the devotion of their deeply religious author. “Time to Stop Your Idling,” in particular, demonstrates Cotten’s fervent faith: 

“If you don’t like your brother, don’t scandalize his name/ Put it in your bosom and take it on to God/ Used to have some friends, to come along with me/ But when I got converted, they turned their backs on me.”

It was not until many years later that Cotten returned to music.

By chance encounter, Elizabeth Cotten started working for the Seeger family in Washington, D.C. as a maid and cook at age 60. The Seegers were a family of influential folk musicians and musicologists. Ruth Crawford Seeger was a noted composer and music teacher, while her husband, Charles, pioneered the field of ethnomusicology. The Seegers soon recognized Cotten’s enormous talent and, as a result, documented her music and stories in the early 1950s. Thanks to Mike Seeger’s early recordings of her work, Elizabeth Cotten gained attention by giving small concerts in the homes of Congressmen and senators, including that of John F. Kennedy. At age 62, she recorded her first album, Elizabeth Cotten: Negro Folk Songs and Tunes, which features her famous tune “Freight Train.” Unfortunately, Elizabeth Cotten battled many cases of copyright infringement after “Freight Train” experienced unexpected international success. Copyright laws often disadvantaged Black artists who were not well-educated or resourced and inexperienced in navigating the copyright system. Like many of her peers, Cotten didn’t realize that publicly performing her work would allow anyone to fix the lyrics and claim copyright. Elizabeth Cotten later was ascribed only a third of the songwriting credit.

Black and white photograph of a close up image of an African-American women who is touching her face lightly with her fingertips and looking out of the frame to the upper right
Brian Lanker, Elizabeth “Libba” Cotten from “I Dream a World”, 1987, gelatin silver print, 10-1/4″ x 10-3/8″. Gift from the Trustees of the Corcoran Gallery of Art (Gift of the artist). CGA.1996.10.3 © Brian Lanker Archive

The Cotten style, although difficult for right-handed guitarists to master, became a staple of the folk revival of the 1960s. ​​Cotten’s career generated media acclaim and many awards, including the National Folk 1972 Burl Ives Award for her contribution to American folk music. At the age of 92, her album Elizabeth Cotten – Live! (1983) won the Grammy for Best Ethnic or Traditional Recording. Moreover, Brian Lanker included her photograph in his book, I Dream a World: Portraits of Black Women Who Changed America, which put her in the company of Rosa Parks, Marian Anderson, and Oprah Winfrey. 

Through her songwriting, commanding personality, and unique left-handed guitar and banjo styles, Elizabeth Cotten’s influence has reverberated through generations of younger artists– permeating every genre of music. Her legacy endures not only through her recordings but also in the many musicians who continue to cover her work. Bob Dylan performed “Shake Sugaree,” and The Grateful Dead produced several renditions of “Oh, Babe, It Ain’t No Lie”. Please enjoy this playlist featuring some of Elizabeth Cotten’s masterpieces, popular interpretations of her most cherished works, and artists inspired by her innovation.

by Kendall Larade, Gallery Assistant, Luther W. Brady Art Gallery

Margaretta Peale

Last week President Ellen Granberg was officially inaugurated. In recognition of this historic moment please enjoy this piece from the archives discussing the portraits of some of our past presidents done by Margaretta Peale in the 19th century. President Granberg is GW’s 19th president and first female and openly LGBTQ president. We hope to see GW grow and improve under her leadership!

This post was was written by former Gallery Assistant Maria Gorbaty. It was originally published on the former Luther W. Brady Art Gallery “Found in Collection” Blog in March 2017.

Portrait of Anna and Margaretta Peale
James Peale, Anna and Margaretta Peale, ca. 1805. Oil on canvas, 29 x 24 in. Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, PA.

Margaretta Peale (1785-1882) comes from a prominent family of painters. Her uncle, Charles Willson Peale (1741-1827), is probably the most famous in the Peale family. Charles Willson Peale is known for his portraiture of prominent figures, and also establishing the Philadelphia Museum, one of the first museums in America. Some of Charles Willson Peale’s sons (Margaretta’s cousins) continued in the family business of painting. They are notable for their still lifes and portraits, as well as their unusual names – Rembrandt, Raphaelle, and Titian – names of some of Charles Willson Peale’s favorite artists. [1]

Margaretta’s father, James Peale (1749-1831), was the younger brother of Charles Willson Peale. He was taught how to paint by his older brother and also worked in his studio. James Peale is most notable for his still lifes and miniature paintings. [2] He had six children, most famously Margaretta and her sisters Anna Claypoole Peale (1791-1878) and Sarah Miriam Peale (1800-1885). Margaretta’s sisters were acclaimed female painters of their time and became the first women members of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA), which was the first arts academy in America. They were also among the first women to professionally paint for a living. [3] While Margaretta was not a member of PAFA, she still had the honor of exhibiting her work at the academy. Today Margaretta’s legacy is still overshadowed by that of her sisters, however this is most likely due to the fact that many of her paintings no longer exist.

Still life of strawberries and cherries by Margaretta Peale
Margaretta Peale, Strawberries and
Cherries, n.d. Oil on canvas, 10-1/16 
x 12-1/8 in. Pennsylvania Academy
of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, PA.

Although Margaretta Peale was most known for her still life paintings, George Washington University owns five of her portrait paintings – possibly the only ones that are still in existence. The portraits are of William Staughton, Stephen Chapin, William Ruggles and Joseph Getchell Binney (the fifth portrait is an unidentified sitter). These four men all were presidents of the Columbian College, known today as George Washington University.

William Staughton was the first president of the college from 1821-1827. Margaretta was commissioned in 1866 to paint this portrait from her cousin Rembrandt’s portrait of Staughton (Staughton’s portrait by Margaretta is currently in the General Counsel’s office). Staughton had close ties with the Peale family presumably because he knew the Peale family while he lived in Philadelphia as a Baptist Minister, and later he became Margaretta’s brother-in-law. Anna Claypoole Peale was the second wife of Staughton and married him in August 1829, unfortunately that same year he died. [4] A portrait of William Staughton painted by James Peale in 1811 is also owned by GWU and can be found next to Margaretta’s portrait of Stephen Chapin in a small gallery in Gelman Library on the first floor.

Stephen Chapin was the second President of the Columbian College from 1828-1841. This portrait, painted around 1868, was commissioned by the Board of Trustees for the University. The board asked Margaretta to paint the portrait of Dr. Chapin from a likeness of his portrait owned by William Ruggles.

Portrait of former President Staughton by Margaretta Peale
Margaretta Peale, William Staughton, D.D., n.d.
Oil on canvas. The George Washington University
Permanent Collection.

Portrait of former President Chapin by Margaretta Peale
Margaretta Peale, Stephen Chapin, D.D., c.1868. 
Oil on canvas. The George Washington 
University Permanent Collection.

William Ruggles was never officially a president of the University, but served as an acting president three times from 1822-1877 during his years as a GWU faculty member. [5] Ruggles was a very influential person at the University, and holds the record of the longest consecutive period of teaching at GWU. Ruggles’s portrait is currently in the Lenthall Townhouses.

Joseph Getchell Binney was the fourth President of GWU from 1855-1858, and his portrait can be found in the the School of Media and Public Affairs at the George Washington University. His portrait was recently on view in our exhibition The Other 90%.

Portrait of former President Ruggles by Margaretta Peale
Margaretta Peale, William Ruggles, n.d. Oil on 
canvas. The George Washington University 
Permanent Collection.
Portrait of former President Binney by Margaretta Peale
Margaretta Peale, Joseph Getchell Binney, D.D. (Doctor of Divinity), n.d. Oil on canvas. The George Washington University Permanent Collection.
Portrait of Unidentified Sitter by Margaretta Peale
Margaretta Peale, Unidentified sitter, ca. 1868. Oil on canvas. The George Washington University Permanent Collection.

[1] http://philadelphiaencyclopedia.org/
[2] http://americanart.si.edu/
[3] https://nmwa.org
[4] https://library.gwu.edu/ead/ms0311.xml
[5] http://library.gwu.edu/ead/rg0002.xml#ref1109