Whaler and Fishing Vessels near the Coast of Labrador

Whaler and Fishing Vessels near the Coast of Labrador
Artist
Creation date
Materials
oil on canvas
Dimensions
18 x 30 in. 28 3/8 x 40 1/4 x 3 3/8 in. (framed)
Credit line
Gift of Delavan Smith
Accession number
13.325
Collection
Currently On View In
Paine Early American Painting Gallery

In Bradford's day, icebergs were seen as symbols of the perpetual process of formation and destruction, and the icy equivalents of mountains.

The whaler and fishing vessels add a human presence that tempers the awesome scale of nature.

Gift to the museum by Delavan Smith
Reproduction of these images, including downloading, is prohibited without written authorization from VAGA.

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Early American

William Bradford

Whaler and Fishing Vessels near the Coast of Labrador, about 1880

oil on canvas

18 x 30 in.

Gift of Delavan Smith

13.325

Learn More

Born and raised in New Bedford, Massachusetts, William Bradford was the son of Quaker parents.  Although his primary job was clerk in his father’s dry goods store, in his spare time he would sketch.  Bradford launched his professional career in the early 1850s by selling portraits of ships for twenty-five dollars.  When he opened his studio in 1854, a Dutch painter, Albert Van Beest, became his teacher and collaborator.  Bradford painted seascapes and whaling pictures of local scenes.  In 1861, he began a series of trips to Nova Scotia, Labrador, and Greenland, during which time he painted and photographed the area. In the 1870s Bradford set up a studio in San Francisco and traveled throughout the West painting such scenes as Yosemite and the Sierra Nevada Mountains. The numerous photographs that he took were often used as a basis for his paintings, but were never copied.  Bradford became famous for his seascapes, particularly those that focused on the Arctic region.

With Frederic Edwin Church, Bradford was responsible for popularizing the Arctic in American art.  Both painters first visited the region in separate voyages during the summer of 1861, and Bradford returned every year through 1869, making sketches and photographs of motifs he used throughout his career.  Fired by explorers’ accounts the American fascination with the Arctic was part of the era’s broader Romantic appetite for exotic places and new experiences. Typical of the Hudson River School painters’ inclination to interpret nature in a spiritual sense, icebergs were seen as symbols of the perpetual process of formation and destruction their protean substance molded into nearly supernatural shapes.  In this sense, they were the icy equivalents of mountains synonymous with physical and spiritual grandeur.  Whaler and Fishing Vessels near the Coast of Labrador shows man existing on equal terms with nature as part of God’s universal harmony. 

Reference

William Bradford and Richard Kugler.  William Bradford: Sailing Ships and Arctic Seas, New Bedford, Connecticut:  New Bedford Whaling Museum, 2003. ISBN-13: 978-0972222211

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