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Owl's Head, Penobscot Bay, Maine

Fitz Henry Lane (American, 1804–1865)
1862

Medium/Technique Oil on canvas
Dimensions 40 x 66.36 cm (15 3/4 x 26 1/8 in.)
Credit Line Bequest of Martha C. Karolik for the M. and M. Karolik Collection of American Paintings, 1815–1865
Accession Number48.448
CollectionsAmericas
ClassificationsPaintings
Owl’s Head is one of Lane’s best-known and most admired works. He presents a contemporary coastal town with its commercial traffic, but he has greatly simplified the idyllic harbor view—a popular artistic motif—in virtually every detail. There are few props in the foreground and background to suggest daily affairs; instead, a single boatman gazes at a seemingly unpopulated bay. The distinctive profile of Owl’s Head with its tiny lighthouse is clearly silhouetted against the evening sky.
Geometric clarity and simplicity set Lane’s work apart from landscape scenes of the previous century. In Owl’s Head, nature is a presence that envelops and transfixes the solitary boatman, but Lane’s picture renders this presence in the modest format and with some of the decorative appeal of an earlier era.


This text was adapted from Diana Strazdes’s entry in A New World: Masterpieces of American Painting, 1760–1910, by Theodore E. Stebbins, Jr., et al., exh. cat. (Boston: Museum of Fine Arts, 1983).

InscriptionsReverse, before relining: Owl's Head-Penobscot Bay, by F.H. Lane, 1862.
ProvenanceAnnette Parsons (Mrs. John LeFavour) Stanley (1849-1918), Gloucester; by 1938, to Mrs. Louise S. Campbell, Montclair, New Jersey; 1943, with Charles D. Childs, Boston; 1943, to Maxim Karolik, Newport, R.I.; 1948, bequest of Martha C. (Mrs. Maxim) Karolik to the MFA. (Accession Date: June 3, 1948)

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