Second version, acquired in New Orleans by the Western Art Union, 1849

Second version, acquired in New Orleans by the Western Art Union, 1849

James Robb sold his Greek Slave for $3,500 to the Western Art Union, a Cincinnati-based membership organization founded in 1847 with the aim of promoting art among a wider public. (See Martina Droth’s essay.) For an annual membership fee of $5, subscribers were entitled to an engraving, free admission to the Union’s gallery, and a chance to win a major work of art—such as The Greek Slave—in a lottery prize-draw. The Union’s acquisition of The Greek Slave was a publicity coup, especially at a local level, since Hiram Powers had begun his career in Cincinnati.