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Artists
and Artisans
Artists
and artisans have been present in New Bedford since the eighteenth
century, their work often reflecting changes in the life of a
village that became America's whaling capital.
From
farmer artisans to fine furniture makers
In the colonial period, farmers in the New Bedford area were often
part-time cabinet-makers. By the late eighteenth century, the
whaling industry had produced a wealthy merchant class that could
afford the items produced by full-time cabinet makers, clock makers,
and chair makers, who began to advertise in the local newspaper
around 1799.
Extraordinary mansions
Magnificent houses were built in New Bedford in the 1820s and
1830s, symbols of the profits reaped by whaling merchants. During
the nineteenth century, over 200 craftsmen were involved in furniture-making
in New Bedford and supplied furnishings for these great houses.
They prospered along with their city and established a reputation
for crafting furniture of exceptionally high quality.
From melodeons to tall-case clocks
Historical records demonstrate the variety of craftsmen active
in the city during the golden age of whaling:
- Cabinet
makers;
- Chair
makers;
- Chest
makers;
- Clock
and watch makers;
- Gilders;
- Gunsmiths;
- Looking-glass
and picture frame makers;
- Melodeon
manufacturers (the melodeon was a small reed organ);
- Polishers;
- Upholsterers.
Chests for the seafaring man
New Bedford craftsmen specialized in making seachests, which were
typically 6-board pine chests. They were sold to thousands of
men, who used them to carry their belongings on whaling voyages.
A haven for painters
Some of America's finest painters have lived and worked in New
Bedford, especially during the last half of the nineteenth century
(click thumbnails for larger image):
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Clifford
Warren Ashley (1881-1947), a New Bedford native,
was an artist and writer. In 1904, he observed a whaling voyage
aboard the Bark Sunbeam, which he wrote about for Harper's
Monthly Magazine and in his own book, The Yankee Whaler. As
a painter, he recorded scenes on the islands of Buzzards Bay,
on Cape Cod, and along the New Bedford waterfront |
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Albert
Bierstadt (1830-1902), born in Germany, came to
live in New Bedford when he was two years old. He became noted
for vast canvasses of the American West. In later years, he
also painted wild animals of North America |
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William
Bradford (1823-1892), born in Fairhaven, painted
portraits of whaling vessels in New Bedford harbor, before
sketching and photographing in Labrador and the Arctic. He
also painted the American landscape in places like the Sierra
Nevada mountains and Yosemite. |
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Charles
Henry Gifford (1839-1904) was born and died in
Fairhaven. Although his parents encouraged him to try carpentry
and shoemaking, he eventually became a noted painter of marine
scenes. At the age of twelve, he had been deeply influenced
by seeing an exhibition of Albert Bierstadt's paintings. |
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Robert
Swain Gifford (1840-1905), born on an island
in Buzzards Bay, studied with Albert Van Beest (see below)
and became a landscape painter and etcher. He traveled widely
in Europe and Africa and enjoyed a long career as a teacher
in the Cooper Union schools in New York.
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Benjamin
Russell (1804-1885), served as a cooper on a whaling
vessel and painted whaling scenes and ship portraits when
he returned home. He collaborated with Caleb Purrington on
a Panorama of a Whaling Voyage 'Round the World,' which is
now in the Museum's collection, and also created landscapes
and domestic scenes. |
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Albert
Pinkham Ryder (1847-1917), born in New Bedford,
was one of the most distinctive painters in the history of
American art. An introspective man, his paintings came from
inner visions rather than from the study of nature. He constantly
reworked his oils, so that only 165 are known. |
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Clement
Nye Swift (1846 - 1918), born and died in the town
of Acushnet, MA. He first aspired to be an animal painter,
and traveled abroad to study the style of French painters.
His work met with critical acclaim, and he exhibited in the
famous Paris Salon from 1872-1881. He also wrote poetry --
in particular, verses which were published in the New Bedford
Standard on August 27, 1916, featuring "The Ship that Never
Will Sail" in praise of the building of the Lagoda ship model
at the Whaling Museum. |
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Dwight
Tryon (1849-1925), born in Hartford, Connecticut,
summered in South Dartmouth and was associated with the Tonalist
and Quietist schools of painting. He created landscapes that
are lyrical and subtle. |
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Albert
Van Beest (1820-1860), born in Holland, spent three
years collaborating with William Bradford (see above). A talented
marine artist, Van Beest was particularly skilled at capturing
the drama of shipwrecks and storms at sea. |
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William
Allen Wall (1801-1885), who was born and died in
New Bedford, came from a Quaker family. After trying his hand
at clockmaking and watchmaking, he studied painting in Europe
and returned to New Bedford to do portraits, landscapes, and
historical subjects, producing a rich pictorial history of
his native city.
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