The Boat Builders - 1873
by Eric Glaser
Title
The Boat Builders - 1873
Artist
Eric Glaser
Medium
Painting - Oil On Panel
Description
The Boat Builders - 1873
Winslow Homer was the most down-to-earth visual interpreter of American life in the 19th century. During the Civil War, he was sent to the front as an artist-correspondent for Harper's magazine, and his sketches of battle scenes gave readers a close-up view of Americans at war. In the 1870s, Homer depicted a variety of subjects, but his favorite themes were rural settings that included children playing in the out-of-doors. He recorded them in a realistic manner, without the sentimentality that was so prevalent in the work of his contemporaries.
Homer spent the summer of 1873 in Gloucester, Massachusetts, where he painted The Boat Builders, which belongs to a series of prints and drawings devoted to shipbuilding. His genius for subtle yet penetrating narrative is apparent in the central passage of this small canvas: by overlapping the toy boat and the sailing ship, the artist connects the real world of fishermen with the boys' imagination. The juxtaposition also predicts the future of these Cape Ann youths, who will likely make their living from the sea. The painting conveys a sense of deep peace as the boys play quietly in the brilliant sunlight. A celebrated magazine illustrator, Homer also used this image of two boys in an engraving for the Harper's Weekly of October 11, 1873.
[Homer's] art is the world as a boy sees it . . . with delights to be explored, such as we remember from our own young days.
-- Art historian Lloyd Goodrich, 1973
The Maritime Themes of Winslow Homer
Winslow Homer was the premier interpreter of nineteenth-century American life, which he portrayed frankly. During the Civil War, Homer was sent to the front lines as an artist-correspondent for Harper's magazine, and his sketches of battle scenes gave readers a detailed view of Americans at war. Homer's early activity as an illustrator prepared him well for his career as a genre painter. Many of America's leading artists had followed a similar path. Unlike them, however, Homer did not abandon illustration, and he continued to produce designs for Harper's Weekly on a regular basis. His graphic work remained separate from his paintings until about 1870. Then, over the next four years, his canvases often provided the basis for his magazine prints, and many of his pictures may have been done with both media in mind. In the 1870s, Homer depicted a variety of subjects, but his favorite themes were rural settings that included children playing out-of-doors. He captured them in a realistic manner, without the sentimentality that was so prevalent in the work of his contemporaries and that seemed to define Victorian domestic scenes.
During the early 1870s, Homer often explored a single theme through several media, and his oil painting, Boat Builders, set on the coast of Gloucester, Massachusetts, relates to a series of prints and drawings devoted to shipbuilding. Homer also used this image of the two boys in an engraving for the October 11, 1873, issue of Harper's Weekly. The scene pairs Homer's love of outdoor subjects with his fondness for themes of boys at play. In the central passage, Homer's genius for subtle, yet penetrating narrative connects the real nautical world with the boys' imagination by overlapping the toy boat and sailing ship. In their play, the two boys may have been preparing for future lives at sea as fishermen, sailors, or shipwrights. This panel bears only a trace of the ominous tone that often pervades Homer's paintings of life by the sea.
Source: Indianapolis Museum of Art
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August 7th, 2016
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