Janice Hyland and Alan Granby in the gallery with their Scotties, Tucker and Teddy.
The title, which alludes to marine painting's dual claim to art and history, was suggested by Dr Samuel Laufer, a friend and collector who, along with many others, contributed to the volume published by Mystic Seaport in association with Hudson Hills Press.
Granby and Hyland strove to create "a representative visual reference" of the best marine art of the Nineteenth Century, when, combining form and function, American design reached its zenith in the clipper ships and yachts of the 1850s. A salt breeze lifts these pages, which tell a predominately East Coast tale of America and the sea. A West Coast exception is William A. Coulter (1849–1936), a painter of mostly San Francisco Bay scenes, here represented by the portrait of the
J.M. Colman
against the rugged backdrop of the Farallon Islands off the California coast.
Flying The Colors
cleaves between paintings that clearly transcend the marine genre — the "heavy hitters" that easily command six and seven figures at auction — and more primitive works created mainly to document vessels and record events. In the first group, Fitz Henry Lane, Robert Salmon, William Bradford and Francis Augustus Silva are especially admired for their emotionally charged Luminist seascapes.
Hyland and Granby also illuminate accomplished but little known artists, such as H. Forshaw (active 1875–1895), a master of the fogged-in harbor scene whose "Grand Banks Fishery," one of the few known examples of this Newfoundland subject, compares favorably with the better known Alfred Thomas Bricher, whose "A Lift In The Fog, Grand Manan" shares the same deft handling of vaporous light.
Pair of scrimshaw whale's teeth, height 4½ inches. Private collection, Osterville, Mass.; center, polychrome scrimshaw tooth, height 5¼ inches. Private collection.
James Bard (1815–1897), the creator of nearly 4,000 ships portraits, many of them steamships, is the heavyweight of a section that also includes George Henry Durrie, Isaac Sheffield and Jurgan Frederick Huge.
James E. Buttersworth (1817–1894) and Antonio Jacobsen (1850–1821), among the most avidly collected marine artists, merit individual chapters. The best Buttersworths — among them the book's cover illustration, "Yacht
America
Off Castle William" — combine famous ships with identifying flags, important races or encounters, diversified backgrounds dotted with well-known landmarks and sublimely painted water and sky. While her husband is drawn to the magical twilight of Francis Augustus Silva's "Calm Sunset," the dynamism of Buttersworth's classic yachting scenes most appeal to Hyland, a devout sailor.
With as many as 6,000 works to his name, the prolific Jacobsen is most widely associated with American ship portraiture. The authors call him the "pictorial historian of the Republic, depicting her commerce and leisure on the high seas as she grew into a great nation…." Most famous for transatlantic steam sail vessels, Jacobsen is beloved for his workaday portraits of tugboats, side-wheelers and pilot boats, as well.
"American Eagle with Sunburst,” anonymous, 16½ by 18½ inches. Collection of William I. Koch.
A chapter devoted to foreign painters of American subjects hurriedly covers British artists, mainly the Liverpool school, and touches on a handful of European and Chinese painters of ships and port scenes. "American Ship
Joshua Bates
off Whampoa Anchorage" is one of the best of several oils on canvas by Sunqua, one of the few Chinese port painters to label his work.
Their appetite for the grueling process of book production apparently undiminished, Granby and Hyland are well along on a fourth volume, one devoted to the art and artifacts of the America's Cup, the oldest active trophy match in international sailing competition. The subject is also touched upon in
Flying The Colors
.
Beginning with Buttersworth, the most famous of the unofficial America's Cup painters, and Frederic Cozzens, whose mastery of watercolor technique issues a credible challenge to Winslow Homer, many American marine artists captured the contest in all its glorious detail.
Flying The Colors
replicates the 1885 match between the American yacht
Puritan
and the English competitor
Genesta,
memorably depicted in an 1887 oil on canvas by Jacobsen, who also painted the yachts singly in a rare matched pair of America's Cup pictures. Another view, in shadow box form, of the
Puritan
is the work of W.H. Green.
Flying The Colors
includes treatments of the 1887 race between the New York Yacht Club's
Volunteer
and the Royal Clyde Yacht Club's
Thistle
by Charles S. Raleigh, a primitive ship portraitist from New Bedford, Mass.
"Calm Sunset” by Francis Augustus Silva, oil on canvas, 29 by 50 inches. Private collection.
Fred Pansing's rare New York Harbor scene of the
Defender
, which successfully defended the America's Cup in 1895, contrasts with Joseph Otis Minot's Impressionistic watercolor on paper rendering of the launching of the
Defender
from the famous Herreshoff boatyard in Bristol, R.I.
The folk artist Thomas Willis, whose ship portraits bring sun and surf to life with three-dimensional silk sails and embroidery rigging, recreated the 1899 America's Cup race between
Columbia
and
Shamrock
with the Sandy Hook lighthouse in the distance.
Everyone is entitled to a favorite view. My own might be Jacobsen's portrait of
Dauntless
in an America's Cup trial of 1871. Forsyth & Morgan built the yacht in 1866 just down the street in Mystic Harbor, but the ship sunk in a storm in 1915 in Essex, Conn.
The most recent book by Janice Hyland and Alan Granby: Flying The Colors: The Unseen Treasures Of Nineteenth Century American Marine Art.
Illustrations of marine arts in the round are sprinkled throughout
Flying The Colors
, offering hope that another Hyland-Granby venture will squarely address utilitarian arts. Vying for readers' attentions are Bellamy and Stapf eagles, engraved and polychromed scrimshaw teeth, a Chelsea mariner's clock, a ship's barometer and two exceptional Liverpool jugs hand painted with the sailing ships
General Mercer
and
Vanilia.
The jugs, both just over 10 inches tall, are from the collection of the late S. Robert Teitelman, whose historical pottery prompted furious bidding at Northeast Auctions in August.
"This anthology is thus a showcase for the rarely seen and the newly cherished, a unique treasure trove of revelations and surprises," Stuart M. Frank, senior curator of the New Bedford Whaling Museum, writes in his opening essay. "To have them gathered together and printed so faithfully adds substantially to our appreciation and understanding of the artists, great and small, who produced them, and the sumptuous genre that so eloquently addresses our illustrious seafaring past."
Proceeds from the sale of the $125 hardcover book benefit Mystic Seaport Museum. To order, contact the museum at 800-331-2665, 860-572-5386 or
www.mysticseaport.org
Editor's Note: Lauren P. Della Monica was a co-author for the book chapters. Julie Carlson Wildfeur also contributed.