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Preview image of work. tempera on masonite mounted on stretcher,  Night Hauling 9585

1985.59

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Night Hauling

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Artist

Andrew Newell Wyeth (Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania, 7/12/1917 - 1/16/2009, Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania)

Title

Night Hauling

Creation Date

1944

Century

20th century

Dimensions

23 in. x 37 1/4 in. (58.4 cm x 94.3 cm)

Object Type

painting

Creation Place

North America, United States, Maine

Medium and Support

tempera on masonite mounted on stretcher

Credit Line

Bowdoin College Museum of Art, Brunswick, Maine, Gift of Mrs. Ernestine K. Smith, in memory of her husband, Burwell B. Smith

Copyright

This artwork may be under copyright. For further information, please consult the Museum’s Copyright Terms and Conditions.

Accession Number

1985.59

Night Hauling was painted by the twenty-seven-year-old Andrew Wyeth at the height of World War Two. Set against the Maine coast in Port Clyde, where Wyeth’s family summered, it depicts a shadowy lobsterman hauling in a trap under cover of darkness, the scene lit only by the figure’s concealed lamp and the water’s startling nocturnal phosphorescence. Wyeth originally called the painting The Poacher, a title that allows us entry into the work’s literal narrative, while denying none of its mystery and ritual. Typical of the artist’s work from this period, Night Hauling pushes realism to the brink of surrealist fantasy. The son of famed illustrator N. C. Wyeth, Andrew Wyeth emerged at mid-century as one of America’s most popular painters.

Keywords: landscape (representation)