Campus Collections

Brown University Portrait Collection

The University's Portrait Collection dates to 1815, the year Brown acquired its first portrait — a painting of its founding president James Manning.

first portrait of james manning
Portrait of James Manning by Cosmo Alexander

As the collection has grown over the years the subjects of these portraits have included administrators, faculty, students, trustees, and benefactors. Many are Brown graduates, although some are community leaders, military heroes, or other figures with only tangential connection to the University but still thought worthy of emulation. Most of the people portrayed in these images lived lives that in some way benefited Brown, and consequentially have been meant to serve as an inspiration.

Today the catalogue of the Brown Portrait Collection totals over 300 paintings. These likenesses date from every period in Brown's history, from its founding years to the present time. The portraits represent aspects of the culture of the University, serving as vignettes of the University's concerns and priorities throughout its history. The University unwaveringly values historical continuity, truth, and service. The portrait collection embodies these same principles and can edify and inform generations to come.