Hidden Depths
Winslow Homer took watercolors to new levels. A Chicago exhibition charts the elusive New Englander's mastery
- By Robert M. Poole
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2008, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 5)
Finished in 1899, The Gulf Stream was nearly 15 years in the making, longer than Homer devoted to any other project. This oil painting resulted from a series of watercolors Homer began in 1885, after his first visit to Florida and the Bahamas. He crossed the Gulf Stream for the first time that year and may have seen or heard about a shipwreck there. He started to elaborate upon the experience in watercolors.
The first watercolor of "The Gulf Stream" series, known as Sharks, or The Derelict, portrays an abandoned sloop with sharks circling; another called Shark Fishing, finished about the same time, introduces human interest, a pair of young Bahamian men towing a thrashing shark behind their small boat, which is dwarfed by the predator. A later watercolor, probably from 1899, shuffles these elements—the listing wreck, the black sailor sprawled wearily on deck, a mammoth shark reaching for the stern—into a design that begins to look like Homer's final vision for the oil painting. In its last iteration, he sharpens the drama: the sailor has lost his shirt and hat, a waterspout has boiled up behind him and the single shark of the last watercolor has become five sharks churning around the boat. The sailor, as if beyond caring, looks listlessly away from the sharks, which cavort through waves already flecked with red.
Although acknowledged as one of Homer's most powerful artistic statements, The Gulf Stream was not the sort of art you would hang in the living room, which may be why it sat unsold at M. Knoedler & Company in New York for several years, much to Homer's dismay. "I realize that this small business of mine is of little value to you," Homer complained to the dealer in November 1906. "You are willing to sell & I am ready to paint but I no longer paint for nothing." Homer continued fuming until December, when The Gulf Stream was shown at the National Academy of Design, bowled the judges over and was soon bought by the Metropolitan Museum of Art for $4,500—one of Homer's best payments yet. Bigger checks would follow.
Even as he aged, Homer continued to work both in watercolor and oils, each to its own purpose. The same artist who coolly summoned sharks and doom for The Gulf Stream also created luminous watercolors from the tropics, conjuring the eye-stabbing light and rustling palms of the Bahamas, the mountains of steamy cumulus piling over Key West, the crumbling languor of a hot street in Santiago—all attesting to Homer's omnivorous range, his sure grasp of optical effects and his mastery of color and light.
While his production flagged in later years, there was no sign that his powers of observation or artistic vision wavered. Even after he suffered a mild stroke in 1908, Homer quickly recovered his sight and coordination, resumed painting and tried to reassure his brother Charles by joking about it: "I can paint as well as ever," he wrote that summer. "I think my pictures better for having one eye in the pot and one eye in the chimney—a new departure in the art world."
At age 72, Homer became absorbed by a new project that kept him in Maine for the winter. "I am painting when it is light enough, on a most surprising picture," he reported to Charles in December 1908, "but the days are short and sometimes very dark." The result of this effort was indeed surprising, an oil painting entitled Right and Left. In it, he places two goldeneye ducks so prominently in the foreground that they threaten to swarm into the viewer's face. Homer catches them exactly at their moment of death, cut down by a shot-gunner in a boat, barely visible among jagged whitecaps and choppy seas. Homer's sympathy for the startled prey is obvious and in some way prescient. The painting proved to be his last major oil and his final meditation on mortality. He died of a hemorrhage at age 74 at Prout's Neck, with his brothers nearby and the sound of waves crashing outside.
Robert M. Poole is a contributing editor at Smithsonian. He has visited all of the places that inspired Winslow Homer's art.
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Comments (17)
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Maggie Storey was my Great, Great Grandmother. My Sister and I visited the exhibition of Homer's work in Chicago in 2008 and were welcomed by the Art Institute staff who were genuinely delighted to meet us, direct descendants of Homer's favourite girl!
Posted by Kate Simpson on December 28,2009 | 01:18 PM
I have a lithograph of "The Fog Warning" which was my grandmother's and I love it, probably done about 1920 or so. It is signed by Homer and Hamilton Hamilton on the picture and also on the white edging. Can you tell me anything about it? Thank you. Kathryn Wentz
Posted by Kathryn Wentz on December 22,2008 | 06:32 PM
I've been drawn to the ocean and Homer my whole life. Your article provides another chance to have an interior conversation with and about him. Thank you.
Posted by Mary Anker on August 2,2008 | 11:24 AM
I look forward to each issue of Smithsonian magazine and eagerly await it's delivery. I read it for personal enjoyment with the added benefit of my continuing (forever) education. Before enjoying Winslow Homer's work, my favorite watercolor artist was Millard Sheets of the California W.C. School. Homer painting is my favorite of the last generation. Your artistic staff and production staff are both responsible for the wonderful and accurate offerings of this artist's work. I thank them.
Posted by Ron Erickson on June 11,2008 | 07:05 PM
6/5/08 I just got a chance to read the article, in the May issue, on Winslow Homer and was ready to gas up the car for quick trip to Chicago until I realized that the exhibit has already ended. Not much notice! I'll add my name to the list of those asking if the exhibition will make other stops.
Posted by Charles E. Johnson on June 5,2008 | 03:16 PM
Your article on Winslow Homer in the May 2008 issue prompted me to attend a viewing of the documentary on Homer in S. Yarmouth, MA on May 29, 2008. My interest has been enhanced. The exhibition at Art Institute of Chicago ended on May 11. Is another exhibition scheduled in another part of the country? Bob Dennehy
Posted by Bob Dennehy on May 31,2008 | 03:56 PM
That was an exciting story and like the others I wish more of Homer's art had been featured, but I am hoping to see more some day Thanks I enjoy the mag a lot.
Posted by SABRA TIRPE on May 25,2008 | 06:31 PM
Homer has been my favorite artist since I had an Art Appreciation class in college. His water colors are the best.
Posted by Betty Mizer on May 24,2008 | 06:02 PM
I am looking for a reprodution of a watercolor, by Homer, in your May, 2008 magazine. It was a tropical scene of a black boy under a palm tree. Can you please advise where I might look. Thank you, E Mahl
Posted by Edward Mahl on May 22,2008 | 12:01 AM
I love my Smithsonian magazine and eagerly await it's delivery every month. I read it for pleasure and to learn. ***** Now, I've never been a great fan of watercolors as they always seemed so fragile and temporary. But after reading Robert M. Poole's article on Winslow Homer, I have gained a greater respect and new appreciation for this particular art form. ***** Kudos to everyone involved in the production of this magazine ... from the writers, photographers, artists, illustrators, editors, make-up department, advertisers, sales department (ads and subscriptions), printers, paper suppliers, business offices, every single person, including the janitorial staff. Each of you are essential in the creation of such an outstanding product.
Posted by Mary-Lou Chall on May 21,2008 | 10:57 AM
I am sorry the article did not explore John Singer Sarget's watercolors and their similar devolopements. Did Sargent and Homer know each other's work? Were they rivals like Picasso and Matise? Was there a relationship with in their watercolor painting or was it just a case of "great minds think alike"! In any case, a great article! Thanks
Posted by Carl Aldana on May 10,2008 | 11:17 AM
This page was very interesting.
Posted by hope stapleton on May 5,2008 | 04:30 PM
Your conclusion that Homer longed for the comnpany of women because he painted them is absurd! By that logic, anyone who draws an elephant would wish he WAS one. We have come to expect better from Smithsonian than this.
Posted by James Baxter on May 1,2008 | 10:03 AM
A wonderful article. Thank you. The Art Institute of Chicago's Homer exhibit is glorious. Check out their website at www.artic.edu You may be able to purchase related items and prints there. The exhibit goes through May 11, 2008.
Posted by R L Caires on April 30,2008 | 08:36 PM
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