24 December: open from 10.00 to 15.00. 25 December: museum closed. 

Following a period spent on the English North Coast, Winslow Homer returned to the United States and settled on the equally cold and inhospitable Maine coast. The Distress Signal depicts a rescue at sea. In the foreground a group of sailors watch as fellow crew members prepare to board a lifeboat and reach safety. Their figures seem monumental as they confront a raging sea that is about to engulf a wrecked vessel.
The canvas was first exhibited in 1891 and enjoyed such success that the New York publisher Charles Klackner had photogravure reproductions made and sold. In 1892 Homer made various changes to the work in a process that continued until 1896 when he dated the canvas. These modifications, which consisted of removing the boat’s bulwark rail and turning what was previously a sailing boat in distress into a half-submerged ship, functioned to emphasise the drama of the moment and to place more emphasis on the sea.

CM

19th Centurys. XIX - Pintura norteamericana. NaturalismoPaintingOilcanvas
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