
FITZ HUGH LANE 1804-1865
Ship Starlight, c. 1860
Oil on
canvas, 30 X 50" (76.20 x 127.00
cm.)
Unsigned
Museum
purchase, S28-0-127
A painter of ships and marine views for all of his life, Fitz
Hugh Lane has created, in Ship Starlight, one of the
magical images of his late career. Born and raised in Gloucester,
Massachusetts, where he returned in the late 1840s after several
years of training in Boston, he found most of his inspiration for
subjects along the Massachusetts and
Maine coasts. Apprenticed in Boston at Pendleton's lithography
shop, he learned the technical and expressive values of drawing
in black and white, which gave all his subsequent art a
fundamental command of two essential elements: tonal contrasts
and meticulous delineation of details. Even this work of his late
maturity reflects his mastery of that graphic training, for
although it is a painting of the most delicate nuances of
coloring and of atmospheric unity, its clarity, not just of form
but of vision, derives from his very calculated balancing of
lights and darks and equally controlled handling of line and
outline.
Characteristic of Lane's work at this time, the subject of this
painting only partially reveals itself. While we know the name of
the vessel from the small sign on the headboard at the bow, and
the date of the painting, 1860, we cannot be certain of the
ship's cargo or purpose; we do not know if the artist or a patron
initiated the painting; and the location of the scene is obscured
in the veil of bright fog. This tantalizing fusion of the
specific and identifiable with the elusive and transcendental is
one of his most imaginative achievements in his last years. It
was not always so in his work. Lane had learned all the
conventions of ship portraiture primarily from the prevalent
examples he saw of Robert Salmon's work and from English and
Dutch "marines" at the annual Boston Athenaeum
exhibitions.' Salmon was an established English marine artist who
had emigrated to Boston in 1829, and became the
fashionable painter of the genre there during the next decade and
a half. One of Lane's earliest harbor scenes centering around a
ship portrait was The Yacht "Northern Light" in
Boston Harbor (1845, Shelburne Museum, Vt.), which had an
inscription on the reverse, visible before relining,
"Painted by FH Lane from a sketch by Salmon/1845."
Although Lane would later give up the rather dense, cluttered
composition typical of the older artist, he took over the same
format of a vessel depicted in full broadside profile and
occupying much of the middle ground. The motion of vessels,
figures, water, and air also gives these earlier works a lively
narrative underpinning, which Lane will likewise transform into
the more suggestive and contemplative air seen in Ship
Starlight. Throughout his career he continued to paint such
conventional ship portraits of both locally familiar and
nationally famous vessels, usually on commission from a ship
captain or owner. At the same time, especially from the later
1850s on, his personal style and subject matter was evolving in
the signature images of the New England coast, often stilled in
the delicate transitional moments of dawn or twilight. In these
works the dominating presence of light and atmosphere
increasingly became the principal expressive elements of his
vision. Having depicted countless specific sections of harbors or
shorelines around Cape Ann, Massachusetts and Mount Desert
Island, Maine, documented by pencil drawings on successive summer
trips through the early 1850s, Lane gradually relied less on
factual recording and more on the powers of his memory and
imagination. The Butler Institute canvas is a classic result of
this overlay of meditation and recollection, in which a known and
observed vessel is projected into a ghostly world of suspended
luminosity. Preceding this work, Lane had only occasionally
attempted the challenge of painting scenes of mist or fog, the
most notable examples being Shipping in Down East Waters (c.
1850, William A. Farnsworth Library and Art Museum, Rockland,
Me.), Sunrise Through Mist (1852, Shelburne Museum, Vt.),
and Bear Island, Northeast Harbor (1855, Cape Ann
Historical Association, Gloucester, Mass.). Even with their
special technical effects, these remain essentially depictions of
recognizable places, in comparison to the silvery atmosphere
enveloping the Starlight. Lane had, in fact, portrayed
this vessel once before, in 1854 (Richard York Gallery, New
York), and that earlier picture shows a vessel with a quite
different, lower, profile of the boW.4 She is also anchored just
off a wharf, most likely in Boston Harbor. Called a medium
clipper ship, she was built by E. & H. 0. Briggs of South
Boston, and her launching early in 1854 probably occasioned
Lane's first portrait. Over the next decade she made several
passages around South America to San Francisco and from there to
points across the Pacific.5 During conservation, examination, and
treatment of the Butler Institute canvas in 1985, not only were
various abrasions noted in the paint surface, but multiple layers
of pigment showing changes were discovered, and beneath them
evidence of careful underdrawing in many areas of the
composition. As he worked on the canvas, Lane made a number of
critical adjustments, including lowering some of the spars and
sails on the mizzen mast, and raising the stern and bowsprit.
This last, which accounts for the discrepancy with his
earlier rendering, was purely a refinement to the overall design.
Here the bowsprit's line angles up to converge with the rising
masts of the small schooner off the Starlight's bow;
together they point to the sun burning through the fog and
illuminating everything in its perfect Place.
JOHN
WILMERDING