Provincetown Fisherman
The stately composition and solid forms give the subject a dignity not often associated with fish markets. Hawthorne's green-toned palette evokes the sea and emphasizes by contrasting color the bloody business at hand.
This man was a Portuguese resident of the Cape Cod village where Hawthorne spent most of his career.
Rotunda
Charles Webster Hawthorne
Provincetown Fisherman, about 1915
Oil on wall board
56 x 63 inches
Daniel P. Erwin Fund
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Hawthorne grew up in Maine among the seafaring people who were to become his major subjects. He attended the Art Students League in New York and William Merritt Chase’s summer school at Shinnecock Hills, Long Island. Hawthorne was both a student and teaching associate of Chase and traveled with him to Holland in 1898. There, Hawthorne was influenced by the Old Masters, including Titian and Rembrandt and especially the dark tonalities and fluid brushwork of the 17th-century painter Frans Hals. Much of the Old Master’s style can be seen in Hawthorne’s work, particularly his images of Provincetown fishermen. Hawthorne ran a summer school in Provincetown called the Cape Cod School of Art for more than thirty years. It was the first outdoor summer school for figure painting and grew into one of the nation's leading art schools. He taught his students how to convey character and personality in their work and the importance of direct observation. His own work combines a robust realism with just enough Impressionist touches to enliven his portraits. Hawthorne saw beauty in commonplace things and ordinary people and gave his subjects a grandeur reminiscent of Renaissance painting.
Hawthorne’s favorite subjects were the rugged Yankee and Portuguese fishermen of New England. In Provincetown Fisherman, Hawthorne depicted a Portuguese resident of the Cape Cod village. Careful modeling and drawing show Hawthorne’s grounding in traditional academic principles. The picture’s stately composition and solid, weighty forms give the subject a dignity and grandeur not often associated with the fish market. Hawthorne’s green-toned palette subtly evokes the sea and emphasizes by contrast the bloody business at hand.
Reference
Richard Muhlberger. Charles Webster Hawthorne: Paintings and Watercolors. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2000. ISBN-13: 978-0295979274













