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Overview
of Scrimshaw
The Whalers Art
Definition
and Etymology:
These days, "scrimshaw" is taken to refer
to all kinds of carving and engraving on ivory, bone,
sea shells, antler, and cow horn. However, in its original
context as a traditional shipboard pastime of 19th-century
mariners, scrimshaw refers to the indigenous, occupationally-rooted
art form of the whalers, the defining characteristic of
which is use of the hard byproducts of the whale fishery
itself sperm whale ivory, walrus ivory, baleen
(erroneously called whalebone), and skeletal whale
bone, often used often in combination with other "found"
materials. The origin and etymology of the term scrimshaw
is unknown and has been disputed, but various forms of
it such as scrimsshander, skrimshonting, and
skrimshank began to appear in American whalemens
parlance in the early 19th century. The term originally
referred to the production of sailors hand-tools
and practical implements, such as seam rubbers, fids,
belaying pins, and thole pins, mostly made for the ship
during working hours; but it soon came to signify objects
made by whalemenand, to a lesser extent, by tars
in the naval and merchant services primarily for
their own recreation and amusement, intended mostly as
mementos for folks at home.
Materials:
"Hard
byproducts" of whaling were flotsam and jetsam of
the fishery parts of the whale that had little
or no commercial value and thus could be given over to
the sailors for their own pleasurable diversions. Sperm
whale teeth could be polished to a high gloss, then engraved
with pictures to which lampblack and colored pigments
could be applied. Or they could be carved in relief or
in full round, to produce sculptural forms, human and
animal figures, finials, handles, tools, inlay, and all
manner of ornaments for wooden boxes, canes, and other
objects.
Likewise
walrus ivory. The walrus hunt had been associated with
whaling since medieval times, and even where the whalers
did not take walrus themselves (as was typically the case
in the 19th century), tusks were obtained by barter with
Northern peoples in Canada, Siberia, and Alaska, and were
often utilized to scrimshaw. Virtually anything that could
be made of whale ivory could also be crafted from walrus
ivory.
The
characteristics of whale and walrus ivory are similar.
The advantages of sperm whale teeth are (in especially
fine specimens) its milky smoothness, homogeneity of texture,
breadth, and rich color. However, a length of 20 cm (or
8 inches) is uncommonly large for a sperm whale tooth;
28 cm (11 inches) is just about the record. Walrus tusks,
on the other hand, frequently range up to 70 cm (about
27 inches) or longer: they not only provide a larger surface
for pictorial engraving, but can be cut and sliced and
combined into larger objects or larger ornaments, including
the slats for swifts (yarn-winders), shafts and
handles for pie crimpers, even the bars and slats
for elaborate birdcages.
Baleen
is the keratin plates in the mouths of the odontocete
or so-called baleen whales, which includes all
of the great whale species except sperm whales. Biologically,
these keratin plates are larger manifestations of the
same material as human fingernails, animal hoofs, and
bovine horn. As applied to scrimshaw, baleen tends to
be sinewy, brittle, and in many ways difficult to work;
it is also vulnerable to larvae parasites. But it is also
reasonably pliable, which is the basis of its commercial
viability for corset stays, umbrella ribs, and skirt hoops.
Properly handled, it is ideally suited for corset busks
(staybusks) or bent-sided round and oval ditty-boxes.
A deft artisan can also incise it effectively with pictures.
Through
the centuries, each of these products had commercial value
from time to time, and so were only intermittently available
to whalers for their own hobby work. Baleen had many commercial
applications, but a baleen surplus in Holland in the 17th
century eroded its commercial value, affording mariners
an opportunity to obtain pieces of baleen for their own
use. Skeletal whale bone was used for architecture and
artisanry by Norse and Basque whaling pioneers in medieval
times; but, beginning in the 17th century, pelagic whalers
who were primarily concerned with oil and secondarily
with baleen discarded the bones as worthless deadweight.
So eventually bone, too, came into the hands of whaleman-artists.
Whalemen
often used the basic materials that define scrimshaw
sperm whale ivory, walrus ivory, baleen, and skeletal
bone in combination with other "found"
materials, typically bits and pieces of wood, metal, sea
shells, tortoise shell, and cloth. Latin American coins,
in wide circulation in the Pacific, could be fashioned
into finials and fixtures. The characteristic basic black
pigment was lampblack, a suspension of carbon in oil,
the product of combustion, easily obtained from the shipboard
tryworks (oil cookery) or from ubiquitous oil lamps.
(The notion that whalemen used tobacco juice as a pigment
for scrimshaw is purely fanciful: it isnt black,
it doesnt work, and not even a single example has
been documented.) Colored pigments for polychrome
(multi-colored) works included verdigris (a tenacious
green deposit naturally forming on copper and brass),
various homemade fruit and vegetable dyes, and commercially-produced
india or china ink.
Scrimshaw
Precursors
Whale ivory, bone, and baleen precursors to whalemens
scrimshaw appeared almost from the beginning of medieval
European whaling: domestic implements carved out of skeletal
bone by Vikings in Norway, game pieces and chessmen made
at Paris, Cologne, and elsewhere, and an impressive inventory
of 11th- and 12-century votive carvings produced in English
and Danish monasteries. Walrus tusks from Norway became
a cheaper substitute for elephant ivory (which was imported
to Europe from Africa by Venetian and Genoese merchants),
and found its way into the hands of artisans in Central
Europe, England, Turkey, Russia, and Spain. In the 17th
and 18th centuries, Dutch and German whaling captains
occasionally used baleen to make oval boxes, mangles (for
folding cloth), and votive objects commemorating a family
event or a successful hunt.
The
Advent of Whalemens Scrimshaw
It
was not until after the Napoleonic Wars that the meteoric
rise of whaling, resulting in longer voyages, larger crews,
and over-manned ships, created an atmosphere for scrimshaw
to flourish on a large scale. A few bone swifts, straightedges,
and hand-tools survive from the 18th century; but the
earliest known works of engraved pictorial scrimshaw date
from circa 1817-21. Contrary to popular belief in many
quarters, which ascribes the origin of pictorial scrimshaw
to American hands, the first practitioners to adorn sperm
whale teeth were British South Sea whalers, a few of whose
pioneering works survive in the Museum collection. The
first piece to bear a date is elaborately but anonymously
inscribed from the whaleship Adam of London, date
1817. The first known American scrimshaw artist, and one
of the best, was Edward Burdett (1805-1833), who began
scrimshandering circa 1824. The first American piece to
bear a date is a recently-discovered tooth engraved by
Edward Burdett aboard the ship Origon of Fairhaven,
Massachusetts, in 1827. The most famous early scrimshaw
artist is Burdetts fellow-Nantucketer Frederick
Myrick (1808-1862), who produced 36 or more so-called
"Susans Teeth" aboard the Nantucket ship
Susan during 1828-29: he was the first ever to
sign and date some of his work. These pioneers were the
vanguard of a tremendously productive generation of American,
British, and Australian scrimshaw artists who followed
in the 1830s and 40s, the Golden Age of scrimshaw.
Pictorial
Scrimshaw
From the orthodox ship-portraits and whaling scenes
pioneered in the 1820s, the pictorial repertoire expanded
dramatically in the 1830s to include virtually every kind
of image and theme. Sedate female figures and family groupings
were persistent favorites. Patriotic subjects, naval scenes,
symbolic figures like Britannia, Columbia, and Hope, and
portraits of Great Men and Women George Washington,
the Marquis de Lafayette, Napoleon, Josephine Bonaparte,
and Jenny Lind abounded. The scrimshanders
eye took in all subjects and themes, Biblical, mythological,
and theatrical, zoölogical and botanical, urban,
rural, religious, and ecclesiastical, domestic, foreign,
exotic, and banal.
Diversity
of Scrimshaw
It
is the remarkable diversity and intricate ingenuity of
shipboard scrimshaw that drew the comments of contemporaneous
observers. Reverend Henry Cheever remarked that "skimshander"
is a term for "the ways in which whalemen busy themselves
when making passages, and in the intervals of taking whales,
in working up sperm whales jaws and teeth and right
whale bone into boxes, swifts, reels, canes, whips, folders,
stamps, and all sorts of things, according to their ingenuity"
(The Whale and His Captors, 1850). Herman Melville,
a veteran whaleman, if not actually a scrimshaw artist
himself, describes the genre as "lively sketches
of whales and whaling-scenes, graven by the fishermen
themselves on Sperm Whale-teeth, or ladies busks
wrought out of the Right Whale-bone, and other like skrimshander
articles, as the whalemen call the numerous little ingenious
contrivances they elaborately carve out of the rough material
in the hours of ocean leisure" (Moby Dick,
1851). There were indeed many types, produced primarily
as mementos and souvenirs for the whalemen themselves,
and especially as gifts for loved ones at home.
The
swift (an elaborate yarn-winder), a distinctively
American form, was an early and persistent manifestation.
Pie crimpers and kitchen implements proliferated. Corset
busks (staybusks) and canes (walking sticks) were epidemic:
whaleman John Martin, homeward-bound with a full catch
in the Lucy Ann of Wilmington, Delaware, in 1844,
wrote whimsically in his journal , "There are enough
canes in this ship to supply all the old men in Wilmington."
Ditty boxes, workboxes, and tabletop chests could be extremely
simple or highly ornate, made entirely of baleen or bone,
or a combination of materials and inlays, sometimes surmounted
with a human or animal figure carved in full round. Aromatic
boxes of precious Polynesian sandalwood, often exquisitely
inlaid with ivory, abalone, and silver, were constructed
by many painstaking seamen. Among the most elaborate creations
were "architectural" or "architectonic"
forms: pocketwatch stands, usually shaped like miniature
"grandfather" clocks (tall clocks), a nighttime
resting place for dads gold timepiece. Sewing boxes,
typically built of wood or bone, often lavishly fitted
with drawers, spools for thread, pincushions, and other
accessories, were characteristically ornately decorated
with inlay, finials, fobs, and fixtures of marine ivory,
sea shell, tortoise shell, and silver. A skeletal-bone
and or wood-and-bone birdcage could consume countless
months of work at sea. Banjos and violins with ivory and
bone fittings were also in the inventory of the musically
inclined and manually skilled.
In
fact, many whalemen were quite skilled ships
carpenters and coopers perhaps especially so. Having been
trained in the trades, their dexterity and technical competence
would have been substantially better honed than average;
certainly their per capita scrimshaw productivity was
disproportionately high. Nor was scrimshandering limited
to the whalers themselves. Wives and children, who sometimes
accompanied whaling captains to sea, also produced scrimshaw
in significant numbers. Some of the women like
Sallie Smith, wife of Captain Frederick Howland Smith
of Dartmouth, Massachusetts produced work to as
high a standard as their male counterparts.
The
defining characteristic of scrimshaw is the occupational
context of process, materials, and personnel. Its aesthetic,
iconographical, and technical characteristics, exhibiting
trends and tendencies that mostly followed fashion ashore,
place it foursquare within the decorative mainstream.
But its vivacious florescence within a single, sequestered
occupational group render it unique able to impart insights
into the life and times of sea labor in the Age of Sail.
The scrimshaw itself was produced in large measure with
the artists mind fixed on the people back home,
not only as the intended recipients of scrimshaw gifts,
but also as the beneficiaries of his newly-acquired sailors
vision of the wide world. The genre, born of the sea,
constantly looks homeward to shore.
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