Growing up in town, I’ve made
numerous trips to the Palmer. Whether it was on a field trip or something my
family wanted to do on a rainy day, I
found myself walking these halls every year or so from elementary school until
the end of middle school. Walking these vaguely familiar halls brought back
some fond memories for me. This visit was once again a pleasant experience as
the Palmer is like many other museums but with one huge advantage….. less
crowds. Maybe it’s just my experiences with museums but they always seem to
have so many people but not the Palmer, you can just enjoy the art without
being jostled constantly.
Having
been at the Palmer so many times I had some difficulty deciding on an
interesting piece to write about. The obviously interesting pieces I remembered
so they seemed less interesting to me while many others seemed quite mundane….
a earthenware jar without any distinct
characteristics, so exciting. Ultimately I settled on a painting done by Robert
Salmon titled The Lowlight, Moonlight
from 1828. This painting had a foreboding yet hopeful vibe to it upon my first
glance. The sun is about to set on the right, shining into the bay, flanked by
the edge of a moored ship to the far right and a light house preparing for
night in the center of the piece. The light house serves as a divider from the
light hopeful right and the dark foreboding left. To the left of the light
house was town consisting almost exclusively of what appears to be factories.
The dark clouds seem to be rolling away from the right to the left. The bottom
edge of the painting depicts a boy and a man in a top hat on the shore holding
a mooring line for the ship at the right edge of the piece. Beside them on the
far left of the beach is an obviously damaged ship (broken masts and missing
sections of railing) being repaired.
The
painting is making a statement about the industrial revolution. The darkness
represents the era before industrialization, a sort of “dark age.” While the
right shows hope for the future while at the same time commenting with the
setting sun that this era will too draw to close perhaps later than the artist
realized. The broken ship is speaking to how the past appears with the new
ideas and inventions of the early 19th century.
The
artist, Robert Salmon, was a British painter who immigrated to the United
States in the late 1820’s who painted mostly maritime scenes. But his life span
stretched almost the entire length of the industrial revolution and growing up
in England (where the revolution began) would have given him a unique perspective
of the era giving him more credibility than someone trying to depict that time
today.
I once
again enjoyed my visit to the Palmer and will be going back at some point so I
can take my time instead of looking for a piece to write about. I love museums
and the Palmer is one of my favorites and despite its limited collection has a
surprising range of items.
Glad you enjoyed (again!), Austin!
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