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What Do Jackson Pollock, Tennessee Williams and Norman Mailer Have in Common?

Cape Cod's dune shacks are American culture's home away from home

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  • By Paul Starobin
  • Photographs by Suzanne Lewis
  • Smithsonian magazine, June 2012, Subscribe
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Provincetown
From the 1920s on, major figures in American arts and letters—Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning, Tennessee Williams and E.E. Cummings—gravitated toward Provincetown. (Suzanne Lewis)

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Provincetown

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There are no more storied shelters in America than the dune shacks of Cape Cod, an encampment of 19 primitive huts on an isolated stretch of beach near Provincetown, Massachusetts. In 1916, the playwright Eugene O’Neill first arrived in this seaside wilderness, “a grand place,” as he put it, “to be alone and undisturbed.” He produced Anna Christie (1920) and The Hairy Ape (1922) inside a structure later lost to erosion. Jack Kerouac, by his own account, conceived part of On the Road at the enclave in 1950.

From the 1920s on, major figures in American arts and letters—Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning, Tennessee Williams and E.E. Cummings—gravitated toward Provincetown, and it was common for many of them to drop in on friends staying in the shacks. “It was an amazing scene out there,” says Stephen Borkowski, chairman of the Provincetown Art Commission. “It was a crucible of American modernism. Everyone had license—one could lie nude under the stars or plunge into the ocean. No telling what one might encounter—Norman Mailer arm-wrestling Robert Motherwell?”

The properties came under the aegis of the National Park Service (NPS) in 1961. By then, Provincetown’s bohemian heyday was ending, as property values began to escalate. The shacks were entered on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989.

The shacks are still in regular use and still lack electricity and running water. Today, several Provincetown nonprofits help the park service oversee summer artist-in-residence terms, awarded by jury selection and occasionally by lottery, at several shacks. In May, 50 winners from 150 applicants were announced. (The other cabins have been leased long-term by individuals through the NPS. Many leases expire in 2014; the public may then be able to enter an NPS lottery for stays in the shacks.)

Michael Lyons, a watercolorist, recalls vividly the August afternoon in 2007 when he began a three-week sojourn in the shacks. Accustomed to the din of Manhattan, he slept wearing earplugs that first night—to blot out the skittering of field mice in the rafters. By the next morning, however, he was painting in the open air. He returned in 2010, continuing to record the evanescent beauty of the shore.

During 2008 and 2010, Suzanne Lewis produced a major series of abstract paintings in the huts. “The history of all who came before me drew me there,” she says. “It was as if their spirits were there with me.” She hopes to return this autumn.


There are no more storied shelters in America than the dune shacks of Cape Cod, an encampment of 19 primitive huts on an isolated stretch of beach near Provincetown, Massachusetts. In 1916, the playwright Eugene O’Neill first arrived in this seaside wilderness, “a grand place,” as he put it, “to be alone and undisturbed.” He produced Anna Christie (1920) and The Hairy Ape (1922) inside a structure later lost to erosion. Jack Kerouac, by his own account, conceived part of On the Road at the enclave in 1950.

From the 1920s on, major figures in American arts and letters—Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning, Tennessee Williams and E.E. Cummings—gravitated toward Provincetown, and it was common for many of them to drop in on friends staying in the shacks. “It was an amazing scene out there,” says Stephen Borkowski, chairman of the Provincetown Art Commission. “It was a crucible of American modernism. Everyone had license—one could lie nude under the stars or plunge into the ocean. No telling what one might encounter—Norman Mailer arm-wrestling Robert Motherwell?”

The properties came under the aegis of the National Park Service (NPS) in 1961. By then, Provincetown’s bohemian heyday was ending, as property values began to escalate. The shacks were entered on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989.

The shacks are still in regular use and still lack electricity and running water. Today, several Provincetown nonprofits help the park service oversee summer artist-in-residence terms, awarded by jury selection and occasionally by lottery, at several shacks. In May, 50 winners from 150 applicants were announced. (The other cabins have been leased long-term by individuals through the NPS. Many leases expire in 2014; the public may then be able to enter an NPS lottery for stays in the shacks.)

Michael Lyons, a watercolorist, recalls vividly the August afternoon in 2007 when he began a three-week sojourn in the shacks. Accustomed to the din of Manhattan, he slept wearing earplugs that first night—to blot out the skittering of field mice in the rafters. By the next morning, however, he was painting in the open air. He returned in 2010, continuing to record the evanescent beauty of the shore.

During 2008 and 2010, Suzanne Lewis produced a major series of abstract paintings in the huts. “The history of all who came before me drew me there,” she says. “It was as if their spirits were there with me.” She hopes to return this autumn.

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Related topics: Writers Massachusetts


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Comments (4)

Cynthia Huntington wrote a fabulous book, The Salt House, about a summer spent in one of these shacks in the Provincetown dunes.

Posted by Penelope Mazin on June 7,2012 | 12:43 AM

My Name is Maureen Bowie. I am an artist from Runnemede, New Jersey. I was recently awarded a residency at the Margo-Gelb dune shack. My residency will be during the month of September 2012. I am preparing for this awesome adventure and hope to fully experience all that has gone before me and much more.

Posted by Maureen Bowie on June 5,2012 | 09:38 AM

your website does not work

Posted by on June 3,2012 | 11:38 PM

This article is totally false - except for the fact of those who have visited the historic dune shacks, and historic dune Dwellers. In 1989, the dune shacks were deemed eligible for the National Register of Historic Places. It took 23 years for the dune shacks to be actually listed. This just happen this year in 2012. The dune dweller's stipulations all end on different years - agreements that they were forced to sign. There will not be a lottery for these dune shacks.

Posted by Gail Cohen on May 25,2012 | 11:32 AM



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