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(piano music)
Female: If it seem a painting of a woman being rescued
from a shipwreck by a courageous man, whose risking
his life would be filled with sentiment and emotion.
What's so wonderful to me about Winslow Homer is the lack
of that sentiment. We have this dramatic moment.
Homer has not exploited it emotionally.
Male: In fact he's even hidden the face of the hero.
Female: That's a remarkable decision when you
think about it. The man whose saving this womans
life, his face is completely obscured by this
scarf that just happens at this moment to have
[whipped] in front of his face. Of course, this isn't a photograph.
Male: This incredible sense of kind of selfless
heroism. These paintings by Homer were recognizes
inherently American. Their themes, I think,
still resonate with us. When you listen to somebody
whose performed a dramatic rescue, perhaps on
the nightly news, they also push the camera away.
There is a way in which we want to be selfless
in these moments.
Female: We have a real feeling of watching this drama unfold.
Male: The emphasis is almost on the mechanics
of the rescue. This was a new technology that
allowed for the rescue of people from ships near
the shore. You can just make out the loose sail
billowing in the upper left corner. You can see
people who are watching the rescue on rocks
at the upper right. In fact, that rope bows down
and we can feel the weight of these figures as
they skirt with their feet, this terrifying surf.
The colors and the tones their so subdued
and they create the sense of the freezing
menace of the water. It's not just that they're
soaked through. They don't have much time.
That woman is unconscious and close to freezing
to death. There is this real sense of urgency.
Female: So, we look at the water we see grey's,
pale blues, and tones of white. Lots of
different kinds of brush strokes from little
dabs of paint that suggest the water is spraying
upward, to longer strokes that suggest the force of the waves.
Male: I actually love that area just at the cliffs
on the upper right. You can see the spray dissolving
even the solid blacks. If you look at the waves
immediately below the cliffs, you can see the
translucently where the wave is very thin and
light moves through it.
Female: Look at mans right foot in the water.
You feel it dragging in the way that it's slowing
them down as they move along this pulley.
Male: There's a real sense of the particulars
that make this seem so immediate, and I love
the way the water drips from that cord.
Female: Somehow, the paint seems wet as though
there were water spraying up from below that the
clothes the figures are wearing is soaked through.
Male: In fact, in someways this painting is a nude.
The woman is wearing a dress that is absolutely
proper, but her outfit is so laden with water
that it follows the contours of her body.
Female: Look at the drops of water from her right hand.
He could really paint.
Male: If you follow her hips down there's just
a little bit of skin that's exposed just above
her knee. You see that perhaps her petticoat
below her dress. I can almost imagine a 19th century
viewer wanting to pull that down to retrieve her modesty.
Female: This really typical of the subject that
Homer painted later in his career when he lived
in Maine. This idea of man and the forces of nature,
and the futility of mans efforts in the face of nature.
Although in this case we do have a successful struggle.
Male: Obviously, Homer didn't paint this on a
beach watching a rescue. The painting is based
loosely on a fairly recent rescue of the coast
in New Jersey, but was actually posed in
New York City in where he kept his studio even
after he had moved to Prouts Neck. This was
a studio building on West 10th Street. Imagine then
his models up on the roof and him drenching
them with water to make the effect just right.
He recognized as a brilliant painter in his own day.
He was honored as the foremost American painter.
(piano music)