Winslow Homer and the Poetics of Place
June 5 - September 6, 2010
The Portland Museum of Art is presenting Winslow Homer
and the Poetics of Place, on view June 5 through September 6, 2010.
In honor of the
centennial of Homer's
death in September, this exhibition showcases 28 works from the Museum's
collection of Homer watercolors, oils on canvas, and illustrations. Based
upon the extraordinary gift of 17 works by Charles Shipman Payson to the
Museum in 1976, the exhibition features paintings understood to be national
treasures, such as Artists Sketching in the White Mountains (1868)
and Weatherbeaten (1894), as well as The Sharpshooter (1862),
Homer's first oil painting and the gift of Bernard and Barbro Osher. This
is the first time since 1988 that all of these works are on view together
in the Charles Shipman Payson Building, due to their sensitivity to light.
(right: Winslow Homer (United States, 1836-1910), Weatherbeaten,
1894, oil on canvas, 28 1/2 x 48 3/8 inches. Portland Museum of Art. Bequest
of Charles Shipman Payson, 1988.55.1. Photo courtesy of meyersphoto.com.)
The relationship between Winslow Homer (1836-1910) and the Portland Museum of Art is long-standing and intimate. Homer exhibited at the Museum in his lifetime, and in the course of the 20th century, the Museum has become a symbolic home for the artist with the recent purchase of his studio. Long understood to be one of the most important painters in the history of American art, Winslow Homer lived in an age when the United States grew from a young country of small towns to modern industrial nation. Throughout his career as a graphic artist, genre painter, and chronicler of the rugged Maine coast, Homer provided his clients with images that helped create a sense of place in this era of rapid change and growth.
In 2006, the Museum purchased the Winslow Homer Studio in Prouts Neck, Maine, 12 miles from the Museum, and is currently involved in a major conservation and restoration project at that storied site. The Museum plans to open the Studio to the public in September of 2012.
In conjunction with the exhibition, the Museum has created a ground-breaking online resource for the study of Winslow Homer's illustrations. Located on the Museum's website, www.portlandmuseum.org, this resource provides searchable and zoomable access to 250 illustrations. These illustrations are part of a gift of more than 450 Homer illustrations given to the Museum by Peggy and Harold Osher in 1991, a nearly comprehensive collection of Homer's graphic work. A computer station is also available in the exhibition to allow visitors to view these works. This project is funded in part by the National Endowment for the Arts and the Maine Humanities Council.
Winslow Homer and the Poetics of Place is organized by Chief Curator Thomas Denenberg and is accompanied by a catalogue written by Denenberg and designed by Portland-based graphic artist Daniel Pepice. The hardcover catalogue will be available in the Museum Store.

(above: Winslow Homer (United States, 1836-1910), Artists Sketching in the White Mountains, 1868, oil on panel, 9 1/2 x 15 7/8 inches. Portland Museum of Art. Bequest of Charles Shipman Payson, 1988.55.4. Photo courtesy of meyersphoto.com.)
To view wall labels for objects in the exhibition please click here.
Checklist
Editor's note: The Portland Museum of Art provided source material to Resource Library for the above article or essay. If you have questions or comments regarding the source material, please contact the Portland Museum of Art directly through either this phone number or web address:
1-207-775-6148 or 1-800-639-4067
Editor's note: Resource Library readers may also enjoy these earlier articles and essays:
Winslow Homer: American Scenes (6/24/08)
Winslow Homer In America (10/25/07)
Winslow Homer-American Illustrator (8/29/06)
Winslow Homer in the National Gallery of Art (7/14/05)
Winslow Homer: Survival and the Sea (6/21/05)
Winslow Homer: Making Art, Making History (6/2/05)
Winslow Homer the Illustrator: His Wood Engravings, 1857-1888 (1/22/05)
Winslow Homer and the Great Forest; essay by David Tatham (7/20/04)
Winslow Homer: Masterworks from the Adirondacks (7/9/04)
Winslow Homer - The Illustrator: His Wood Engravings 1857-1888 (11/18/03, rev. 12/19/03)
Winslow Homer the Illustrator: His Wood Engravings, 1857-1888 (12/9/02)
Americans Outdoors: Seasonal Prints by Winslow Homer (with selected wall text) (7/5/01)
Rab and the Girls: A Riddle in Paint, by Sarah Burns (5/31/01)
Winslow Homer: The Civil War Years and Winslow Homer: The Gloucester Years (12/4/00)
Winslow Homer: An American Genius at the Parthenon (7/25/00) including an image of Rab and the Girls
Winslow Homer Watercolors at Canajoharie Library and Art Gallery (2/24/01)
Winslow Homer: The Civil War Years and Winslow Homer: The Gloucester Years (12/4/00)
Winslow Homer and the Critics: Forging a National Art in the I870s (8/30/00)
A Fair Wind" - Maritime Paintings by Winslow Homer (4/15/00)
Winslow Homer Facing Nature (2/20/00)
The Art of American Life: Winslow Homer's Graphics (1857-1877) (10/18/99)
Winslow Homer: Early Prints and Paintings (9/11/99)
Winslow Homer (1836-1910) (10/7/99)
Winslow Homer: Works on Paper (8/11/99)
Winslow Homer: Illustrating America (5/15/99)
Winslow Homer and the Elusive African-American Boy (1/16/99)
Winslow Homer: Facing Nature (4/7/98)
From TFAO's Topics in American Representational Art:
Also enjoy online multimedia:
a streaming slide show titled Winslow Homer's Right and Left from the National Gallery of Art, which is a narrated show interpreting one painting. Narration is by Nicolai Cikovsky Jr., senior curator of American and British paintings. A transcript is included in the presentation.
from High
Museum of Art partnering with the Forum Network for Winslow Homer's
Watercolors: Markers in a Life Journey, (52 minutes) a lecture by Elizabeth
Johns, professor emerita, art history, UPenn. in which Dr. Johns discusses
the relationship of Homer's watercolors and some of his oils to his life's
journey. (Lecture contributed by WABE/AFN) [May 11, 2006]
from an online course by Dr. Liana Cheney
of the Graduate School of Education at the University of Massachusetts at
Lowell titled "Art History and Film," the video Winslow Homer:
An American Original, a 49 minute 1999 HBO Artists' Specials series
program directed by Graeme Lynch and produced by Devine Entertainment.
from WTTW11,
which is producing a series of original "Artbeat"
segments, a regular feature on its nightly newsmagazine Chicago Tonight,
to help audiences learn about and connect to the variety of activities that
are part of American Art American City, the clip "Winslow Homer 06:34
2/14/08." For more than 50 years, WTTW11 has served the Chicago community
and beyond as the nation's most watched public television station, earning
a reputation for providing outstanding programming in many areas, including
the arts. (text courtesy Terra
Foundation for American Art). Recent programs include:
and other online resources:
Tour: Winslow Homer Watercolors -- A Survey of Themes and Styles from the National Gallery of Art
Winslow Homer from Wikipedia
Winslow Homer (1836-1910) by H. Barbara Weinberg, Department of American Paintings and Sculpture, The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Artcyclopedia.com for links to images of Winslow Homer paintings
Winslow Homer: Crosscurrents is a 2022 exhibition at the Metropolian Museum of Art Accessed 7/22
Winslow Homer an encyclopedic online resource by Tony Harrison
Winslow Homer: An American Artist Resource Page from usa-people-search.com
Winslow Homer: The Obtuse Bard, by Peter Bueschen
TFAO also suggests these DVD or VHS videos:
Winslow Homer has become famous for his
illustrations of battle scenes during the Civil War, but he feels disenchanted
with what he has experienced and withdraws to a quiet farm. There he meets
a pair of teenagers whose lives have been shaken by the war. Together,
Homer and the kids learn from each other and move forward with life.
Winslow Homer: Society and Solitude is a 2007 full-length documentary by filmmaker Steven John Ross, professor of communication, University of Memphis. Excerpts from an April 6, 2007 press release from Colby-Sawyer College follow:
Homer is examined in this profile of
the American artist, from his early illustrations of the Civil War and
his picturesque scenes of the country and shore, to the powerful images
of nature that characterize his mature and late work. Commentary by the
American art historian John Wilmerding provides a guide to Homer's artistic
progress and to his achievements, particularly his transformation of the
watercolor medium from the purely descriptive into a highly expressive
vehicle.
rev. 3/3/11 RL expresses apprecaition to Kara Lewis for suggesting additional information for this page.
Links to sources of information outside of our web site are provided only as referrals for your further consideration. Please use due diligence in judging the quality of information contained in these and all other web sites. Information from linked sources may be inaccurate or out of date. Traditional Fine Arts Organization, Inc. (TFAO) neither recommends or endorses these referenced organizations. Although TFAO includes links to other web sites, it takes no responsibility for the content or information contained on those other sites, nor exerts any editorial or other control over them. For more information on evaluating web pages see TFAO's General Resources section in Online Resources for Collectors and Students of Art History.
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