Photograph: Werner Schmidt
Showing posts with label Winslow Homer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Winslow Homer. Show all posts

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Another Homer Rowing Image

Well, dear ‘old’ Bill is at it again. Barely had I prepared the previous entry about his Winslow Homer find, and Bill finds another rowing image by Homer. Bill writes, “Running a word search in Google, I discovered another Homer rowing picture, with two men in what looks like a racing shell. Hard to tell, it could be a canoe rigged with oars, but it looks like a pair to me. Of course, everything looks like a pair and I had a pleasant pull in one on the Potomac yesterday morning amid fall colors.”

This ‘new’ Homer rowing picture is called Two Men Rowing on a Lake, a watercolour from 1892. It was for sale at Christie’s, click here to read more about it.

'New' Rowing Sketch By Homer

A couple of days ago I received an e-mail from rowing historian Bill Lanouette of Washington DC. He enthusiastically writes about an interesting new find, a rowing sketch, a man in a single scull, from 1867, by American painter Winslow Homer (1836-1910). Bill writes, “We were in Memphis and visited the Brooks Museum, which had mounted a special exhibit of Homer’s newspaper, magazine, and book illustrations: Winslow Homer: From Poetry to Fiction. There it was, from English poet William Barnes’s Rural Poems - along with a sketch of a coxed four-oared race from another book. And my local library, the Library of Congress, had the book and the image. Your tax dollars at work!”

Bill thinks the poem, see below, is from a local race in England, probably County Dorset, as that is the place where William Barnes (1801-1886) lived and wrote. This is, indeed, very interesting, as the ‘rowing images’ by Homer that I was aware of were of fishermen rowing in their workboats, not any sport sketches of men racing. Great ‘find’, Bill, and thank you for sharing it with HTBS readers.

The exhibit is running between 29 October 29, 2010 to 2 January, 2011. Here is what the museum writes about the exhibit: “The evocative and beautiful wood engravings of Winslow Homer (1836-1910) captured American life in the decades before photography became the preferred medium for illustrating the news. Appearing in magazines such as Harper’s Weekly, his work offered a visual complement to stories of daily life, popular fiction, or major political events. The exhibition of 85 wood engravings includes a full range of Homer’s illustrations, from charming images of children at play or vacationers at the beach, to more somber depictions of soldiers on the front lines of the Civil War. Focusing on the early years of Homer’s career, it offers visitors a chance to experience the artist’s remarkably poignant and enduring images of life in the United States during the mid-1800s.”

Here is the poem "The Prize Winners" from Rural Poems by William Barnes: