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      Connected | May 31, 2021

      Diving into the sea’s transformative power with In American Waters

      Dinah Cardin

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      Dinah Cardin

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      ABOVE IMAGE: Charles Herbert Woodbury. Mid-Ocean, 1894. Oil on canvas. 49 x 72 in. (124 x 183 cm). Courtesy of the Berkshire Athenaeum.

      Amy Sherald, official portrait artist to First Lady Michelle Obama, offers something we don’t always see in museums — black people on a beach.

      Sherald’s 2019 painting Precious jewels by the sea offers a contemporary twist on marine painting while depicting four Black teenagers in bathing suits, the deep blue horizon beyond. Two boys stand tall with girls seated on their shoulders. Sherald describes her motivation to make “images of things that we normally do but we don’t get to see in spaces like museums. Like black people going to the beach. . . So it’s really just about creating American narratives about American people — while critiquing it at the same time.”

      This summer, visitors to PEM will see that marine painting is so much more than ship portraits. In American Waters combines art history, marine history and even neuroscience as well as a range of artists and artistic expressions, and a more inclusive vision for American marine painting and American art.

      Guest in the gallery In American Waters
      Guests in the galleries on opening weekend of In American Waters. Photography by Kathy Tarantola/PEM.


      “We are casting the net more broadly and incorporating works that are clearly infused with maritime themes, which don't necessarily depict a portrait of a ship of a particular moment in time, but evoke the maritime experience in different ways,” says Dan Finamore, PEM’s Associate Director – Exhibitions and The Russell W. Knight Curator of Maritime Art and History.

      Theresa Bernstein (1890-2002). The Immigrants, 1923
      Theresa Bernstein (1890-2002). The Immigrants, 1923. Oil on canvas. Collection of Thomas and Karen Buckley. Image courtesy of Woodmere Art Museum.


      In Theresa Bernstein’s 1923 painting The Immigrants, the artist captures the experience of traveling to America in steerage class in one of the many large ocean liners that arrived in the port of New York in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Located in the Voyages section of the exhibition, the painting explores how artists codified a vision of significant voyages that helped to define the country’s culture and identity. The journeys of both immigrants and enslaved people were often overshadowed by images of iconic and triumphant naval engagements and commercial ventures.

      Michele Felice Cornè (1752-1845). Ship America on the Grand Banks, about 1800. Oil on canvas. 39 3/4 x 56 inches (100.965 x 142.24 cm). Gift of Mrs. Francis B. Crowninshield, 1953.


      Founded in 1799 by the East India Marine Society, PEM developed one of the nation’s first and foremost maritime collections. The works gathered for this exhibition, from America’s early days to the contemporary era, convey powerful origin stories and everyday scenes. Horizons transport us to the sea as a real and imaginative space. The horizon, whether in the realist portrayal by John Frederick Kensett or the modernist abstraction of Norman Lewis, forms a singular point of reference that can orient or disorient us and foster a wide range of emotions.

      Studying brain function can tell us a lot about how we perceive and interpret a work of art, including seascapes. Curious about what parts of a seascape draw the greatest amount of people’s attention and whether there are consistent patterns of viewing behavior, the PEM team collaborated with specialists at Harvard University. The resulting findings are available in a digital interactive in the exhibition’s galleries.

      Guests in the galleries on opening weekend of In American Waters
      Guests in the galleries on opening weekend of In American Waters. Photography by Kathy Tarantola/PEM.


      In her 1928 work, Wave, Night, Georgia O’Keeffe reimagined her encounter of a wave at night on York Beach, Maine. The artist employs her modern approach to spatial abstraction and to the nature of horizons, disorienting the viewer, who might feel simultaneously immersed in the space and distanced from it.

      Guests in the galleries on opening weekend of In American Waters
      Guests in the galleries on opening weekend of In American Waters. Photography by Kathy Tarantola/PEM.


      Co-organized with Crystal Bridges of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas, the exhibition offers a diverse range of modern and historical artists including Norman Rockwell, Hale Woodruff, Paul Cadmus, Thomas Hart Benton, Jacob Lawrence, Valerie Hegarty, Stuart Davis, and many others. These paintings shape our perceptions of the sea and engage our emotions, whether depicting the open ocean or waves crashing on shore, a ship in the midst of battle, or a yacht in racing splendor.

      Today the sea is on the minds of Americans, in part, because of sea-level rise and the impact of associated climate events on coastal communities and beyond. This uniting issue offers us a fresh perspective, one that is both universal and an opportunity to come up with creative solutions. These paintings emphasize our individual and collective experience, and deepen our understanding of the sea as a symbol of national opportunity and invention.

      Guests in the galleries In American Waters exhibition.
      Guests in the galleries on opening weekend of In American Waters.. Photography by Kathy Tarantola/PEM.


      In American Waters is on view at PEM from May 31 through October 3, 2021. To learn more, visit pem.org. Tune into the museum’s podcast, the PEMcast, to hear more about In American Waters and PEM’s Climate + Environment initiative. Available on all podcasting apps. PEM is hosting an ongoing series of special exhibitions, installations, and programs about our changing relationship with the natural world that encourage reflection, inspire conversation, and spark action. Learn more at pem.org/climate-environment and #PEMClimate.

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