The Gulf Stream
1899
The Gulf Stream 1899
Winslow Homer (1836-1910)
Oil on canvas; 28 1/8 x 49 1/8 in. (71.4 x 124.8 cm)
Description:
"The Gulf Stream" was based upon studies made during Homer`s two
winter trips to the Bahamas in 1884-5 and 1898-9. First exhibited at
the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia in 1900,
the picture was subsequently reworked and "improved" by the artist.
Early photographs show changes to the sea and to the back of the
ship, making the composition more dramatic and vivid. The painting
was shown in this state at the Carnegie Institute in Pittsburgh in
1900-1, and then at M. Knoedler and Co. in New York, where the
artist placed on the picture the record-asking price of $4,000.
There were problems selling the work because of either its high
price or its unpleasant subject matter. Homer may have reworked the
painting again in the face of this criticism in order to add the
rigger on the horizon that signals hope and rescue from the perils
of the sea.
This seascape shows a black
sailor on a boat that has lost its mast in stormy and shark-infested
waters. A distant ship offers the possibility of rescue, but the man
is looking in precisely the opposite direction. The boat itself
contains two grimly symbolic shapes: a black cross near the bow; and
a dark tomb-shaped hatch leading below (the hatch is actually
referred to as a "tomb" in Herman Melville`s Moby Dick). Homer
himself had traveled through the Gulf Stream to the Caribbean, but
this image owes as much to a well-known nineteenth century painterly
tradition of boats in distress, for example, Gericault`s Raft of the
Medusa (1818-1819) and Thomas Cole`s The Voyage of Life: Manhood
(1842). When seen in relation to such earlier works, Homer`s
painting addresses larger themes of human struggle and isolation and
the indifference of nature. Because the Gulf Stream is a river-like
current within the ocean, the title "The Gulf Stream" points to the
archetypal association of a river (for example, in Cole`s paintings
and in Twain`s Huckleberry Finn) with a life journey. In portraying
a black man as representative of the human condition, Homer is
clearly rejecting the more common tendency toward racial
stereotyping in the nineteenth century. In his repeated portrayals
of people or animals struggling for existence against an indifferent
natural world, Homer shares the concerns of literary
naturalism as it appears in the works of
Stephen Crane and Jack London (see
Cikovsky and Kelly 369-70, 382-83; Stephen Koja 124).
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