Sketching the Earliest Views of the New World
The watercolors that John White produced in 1585 gave England its first startling glimpse of America
- By Abigail Tucker
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
But White probably also tweaked his Algonquian portraits. The swaggering poses are borrowed from European painting conventions, and one chief carries a gigantic bow that, according to the catalog, "would have reminded any English person looking at it of the similarity between English soldiers and Indian warriors." Other scenes, posed or not, were likely painted with investors in mind. An Algonquian chief, for instance, wears a large copper pendant, signaling that the precious metal was to be found in the New World. Scholars believe this may be Wingina, the "King of Roanoke," who was beheaded not long after White's 1585 visit because an English commander saw him as a threat. (Indeed, the chief probably did not appreciate the colonists' demands on his village's food stores.) On paper, however, the chief's expression is pleasant, perhaps even amused. There is almost no evidence of any English presence in the watercolors. Though tensions with the Indians had started to mount, White portrays an untouched world. This may have been a practical decision on his part: the British already knew what colonists looked like. But, in light of the Algonquians' eventual fate (they would soon be decimated by what they called "invisible bullets"—white men's diseases), the absence of any Europeans is also ominous. The only discernible sign of their arrival in Roanoke is a tiny figure in the arms of an Algonquian girl: a doll in Elizabethan costume.
The girl "is looking up at her mother as if to say, 'Is this someone I could meet or even possibly be?'" says Joyce Chaplin, an American history professor at Harvard University who wrote an essay for the exhibition catalog. "It's very poignant."
White's paintings and the text accompanying them (written by Thomas Harriot, a scientist also on the 1585 voyage) are virtually all that remain of that time and place. After presenting his paintings in England to an unknown patron, possibly Raleigh or the queen, White returned to Roanoke in 1587 as governor, bringing with him more than a hundred men, women and children. Their supplies quickly ran out, and White, leaving members of his own family on the island, returned to England for assistance. But English relations with the great sea power Spain had deteriorated, and as the Armada threatened, he was unable to get back to Roanoke until 1590. By then, the English settlers had vanished, and the mystery of the "Lost Colony" was born. It's still unclear whether the settlers died or moved south to assimilate with a friendly native village. At any rate, because of rough seas, the approaching hurricane season and damage to his ship, White was able to search for the colonists for only about a day and never learned the fate of his daughter, Elinor, his son-in-law, Ananias Dare, and his granddaughter, Virginia, the first English child born in North America.
Such hardships, British Museum curator Kim Sloan writes in the show's catalog, lead one to wonder "what drove this man even to begin, never mind persist in, an enterprise that lost him his family, his wealth and very nearly his life." White's own last years are also lost to history: the final record of his life is a letter from 1593 to Richard Hakluyt (an English author who wrote about voyages to America), in which White sums up his last trip—"as lucklesse to many, as sinister to my selfe."
Today some of the plants and animals White painted, including a glaring loggerhead turtle, are threatened. Even the watercolors themselves are in precarious condition, which is why the British Museum displays them only once every few decades. In the mid-19th century they sustained heavy water damage in a Sotheby's auction house fire. Chemical changes in the silver pigments have turned them black, and other colors are mere shadows of what they once were.
The originals were engraved and copied countless times, and versions showed up in everything from costume books to encyclopedias of insects. The paintings of Indians became so entrenched in the English consciousness that they were difficult to displace. Generations of British historians used White's illustrations to describe Native Americans, even those from other regions. Later painters, including the 18th-century natural history artist Mark Catesby, modeled their works on versions of White's watercolors.
Britain did not establish a permanent colony until Jamestown in 1607, nearly two decades after White left America for the last time. Jamestown was a settlement of businessmen: there was no gentleman-artist on hand to immortalize the native people there. In fact, the next major set of American Indian portraits would not appear until George Catlin painted the peoples of the Great Plains more than 200 years later.
Magazine staff writer Abigail Tucker reported on rare color photographs from the Korean War in the November issue.
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Comments (3)
I would appreciate any informatin on the West Indies location where John White landed before arrive in Roanoke. I cannot find information on this stoppover. Jules Janick, Purdue University
Posted by Jules Janicki on September 2,2011 | 02:03 PM
The last illustration in the set (of the layout of the "village") reminds me of on of those overhead photos of the "lost tribe" discovered last year. One of the photos that showed the tribesmen and the structures looked quite similar (at least in my mind).
Posted by dutch on December 18,2008 | 02:31 PM
I love your photos they are so beautiful.they are the most loving and wonderful picturs I"v ever seen in my 11 years of life.I"v seen so cool things in my life but this is the most wonderful thing.I wish I was there to see it I beat it was so beautiful.I love it! Good job:)
Posted by Brianna Ramirez on December 4,2008 | 09:09 PM
Abigail Tucker, In "Brave New World," (Smithsonian December 2008), you close the article with the statement "...the next major set of American Indian portraits would not appear until George Catlin painted the peoples of the Great Plains more than 200 years later." From August 16 to November 2008, the Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art at Auburn University in Alabama presented "The Indian Gallery of Henry Inman." Inman was hired by Thomas McKenny in 1828 to copy original Indian Gallery portraits that were painted by Charles Bird King in the 1820's. McKenny used Inman's oil copies as the basis for the color lithographs used to illustrate the "History of the Indian Tribes of North America." The King collection was later destroyed by fire at the Smithsonian Institution in January 1865. I suggest consideration of a future collaborative article with Professor Kathryn Braund, Professor of History at Auburn University who wrote the text for the above exhibit's brochure on which my comments are based. I believe that the King/Inman portraits are a "major set of American Indian portraits" which focused on distinguished Southeastern Creek and Cherokee leaders and warriors of the 19th century and were worthy of that distinction well before Catlin's work appeared.
Posted by William E. Wolfe on November 29,2008 | 01:05 PM