Lane, Owl's Head, Penobscot Bay, Maine

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Lane, Owl's Head, Penobscot Bay, Maine

(piano music) Man: We're in the museum of Fine Arts in Boston looking at Fitz Henry Lane's Owl's Head Penobscot Bay, Maine.

This is the place that Lane spent a good deal of time and characteristic of this American artist, sometimes called a luminist.

We have this wonderfully quiet still moment.

Woman: And that's what we mean by the term luminism.

Landscape paintings by a number of American painters where we have a sense of calm and tranquility, views of water.

A quality of light that allows each element of the landscape to stand out in perfect clarity but there is an overall mood of contemplativeness and peacefulness.

Man: It's so typical of American art, especially American marine painting. So this is dawn.

We can see the peach sky in the background and the water is still calm.

The winds of the day have not started.

The ship in the background just put up its sails and is trying to catch whatever breeze is just beginning.

We look out on this space almost through the gaze of the fisherman we see in the lower left of the canvas.

Woman: This is very much a romantic landscape.

One that looks back to the traditions of romanticism.

We might think about Caspar David Freidrich and the way he uses figures.

Looking out to sea with their backs to us.

Or we might even think about John Constable in England painting his native landscape of the Store Valley with that sense of love of his native landscape.

I think that we have that here with Lane.

Man: There is a way that light is able to take the careful rendering of the veracity that all of this detail and clarity offers us.

Man: But still render a painting that is largely poetic.

And that's really one of the issues that is most central to luminism that even with this high pitched specificity there is still room for a painting that is ultimately one that is emotional, that is almost transcendental.

Woman: I think that sense of emotion comes through because of the lack of narrative incident.

We're looking at a seascape but we don't see fisherman busy with activities.

We don't see ships coming in and unloading cargo or other kind of narratives scenes that we might expect in a harbor.

Man: Light is the main protagonist, not the human occupation of the space.

Woman: In a way for me the main protagonist is the house that we see on that tiny little island, and that, as you said, peach-colored light, that we all know so well from looking at the water in the early morning.

We're really transported to this place.

I can almost hear the water lapping at the shore.

Man: This painting invites a kind of careful, quiet, contemplation.

Woman: It's very different from other American landscape painting that we might think of by Albert Bierstadt or Frederic Church that is really grand and operatic and sublime.

It says something big and those paintings are often very large and depict sublime scenes like the Rocky Mountains or Niagara Falls, but here this kind of humble, quiet scene, a kind of different strain in American landscape painting. (piano music)

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Lane, Owl's Head, Penobscot Bay, Maine발음듣기

(piano music) Man: We're in the museum of Fine Arts in Boston looking at Fitz Henry Lane's Owl's Head Penobscot Bay, Maine.발음듣기

This is the place that Lane spent a good deal of time and characteristic of this American artist, sometimes called a luminist.발음듣기

We have this wonderfully quiet still moment.발음듣기

Woman: And that's what we mean by the term luminism.발음듣기

Landscape paintings by a number of American painters where we have a sense of calm and tranquility, views of water.발음듣기

A quality of light that allows each element of the landscape to stand out in perfect clarity but there is an overall mood of contemplativeness and peacefulness.발음듣기

Man: It's so typical of American art, especially American marine painting. So this is dawn.발음듣기

We can see the peach sky in the background and the water is still calm.발음듣기

The winds of the day have not started.발음듣기

The ship in the background just put up its sails and is trying to catch whatever breeze is just beginning.발음듣기

We look out on this space almost through the gaze of the fisherman we see in the lower left of the canvas.발음듣기

Woman: This is very much a romantic landscape.발음듣기

One that looks back to the traditions of romanticism.발음듣기

We might think about Caspar David Freidrich and the way he uses figures.발음듣기

Looking out to sea with their backs to us.발음듣기

Or we might even think about John Constable in England painting his native landscape of the Store Valley with that sense of love of his native landscape.발음듣기

I think that we have that here with Lane.발음듣기

Man: There is a way that light is able to take the careful rendering of the veracity that all of this detail and clarity offers us.발음듣기

Man: But still render a painting that is largely poetic.발음듣기

And that's really one of the issues that is most central to luminism that even with this high pitched specificity there is still room for a painting that is ultimately one that is emotional, that is almost transcendental.발음듣기

Woman: I think that sense of emotion comes through because of the lack of narrative incident.발음듣기

We're looking at a seascape but we don't see fisherman busy with activities.발음듣기

We don't see ships coming in and unloading cargo or other kind of narratives scenes that we might expect in a harbor.발음듣기

Man: Light is the main protagonist, not the human occupation of the space.발음듣기

Woman: In a way for me the main protagonist is the house that we see on that tiny little island, and that, as you said, peach-colored light, that we all know so well from looking at the water in the early morning.발음듣기

We're really transported to this place.발음듣기

I can almost hear the water lapping at the shore.발음듣기

Man: This painting invites a kind of careful, quiet, contemplation.발음듣기

Woman: It's very different from other American landscape painting that we might think of by Albert Bierstadt or Frederic Church that is really grand and operatic and sublime.발음듣기

It says something big and those paintings are often very large and depict sublime scenes like the Rocky Mountains or Niagara Falls, but here this kind of humble, quiet scene, a kind of different strain in American landscape painting. (piano music) 발음듣기

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