<Li> William H. Powell produced a painting that owes an artistic debt to Luetze's work, depicting Oliver Perry transferring command from one ship to another during the Battle of Lake Erie during the War of 1812 . The original painting now hangs in the Ohio Statehouse, and Powell later created a larger, more light toned rendering of the same subject which hangs in the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. In both of Powell's works, Perry is shown standing in a small boat rowed by several men in uniform . The Washington painting shows the direction of travel from right to left, and the Perry image shows a reverse direction of motion, but the two compositions are still similar . Both paintings feature one occupant of the boat with a bandaged head . </Li> <Li> Washington Rallying the Troops at Monmouth, Leutze's companion piece to Washington Crossing the Delaware is displayed in the Heyns (East) Reading Room of Doe Library at the University of California, Berkeley . </Li> <Li> In 1953, the American Pop Artist Larry Rivers painted his version of Washington Crossing the Delaware which is in the collection of The Museum of Modern Art in New York City . The painting has also inspired copies by Roy Lichtenstein (an Abstract Expressionist variant painted c. 1951) and Robert Colescott (a parody titled "George Washington Carver Crossing the Delaware" painted in 1975). </Li> <Li> Grant Wood makes direct use of Leutze's painting in his own Daughters of Revolution . The painting is a direct jab at the D.A.R., scrutinizing what Wood interpreted as their unfounded elitism . </Li>

Who is the black man in the painting of george washington crossing the delaware