Mar 23, 2023 - Sale 2630

Sale 2630 - Lot 102

Price Realized: $ 50,000
?Final Price Realized includes Buyer’s Premium added to Hammer Price
Estimate: $ 35,000 - $ 50,000
WINSLOW HOMER
Perils of the Sea.

Etching printed in dark, brownish black on vellum paper, 1888. 395x520 mm; 15 1/2x20 3/4 inches, full margins. Edition of approximately 100. Signed in pencil, lower right. Published by Klackner, New York, with the address and date lower center. A very good, richly-inked impression of this scarce etching.

In 1881, Homer (1836-1910) traveled to England on his second and final trip abroad. After passing briefly through London, he settled in Cullercoats, a village near Tynemouth on the North Sea, remaining there from the spring of 1881 to November 1882. He often located his paintings of Cullercoats at the harbor and along the water's edge, where the community awaited the return of fishermen from their labor on the harsh North Sea. In these works, Homer celebrated the rugged fortitude of the fishermen's wives, whom he depicted with a new monumentality, possibly inspired by the Greek sculpture and other European art he had seen in London (Jean-François Millet had gradually popularized such representations in his Barbizon school paintings, drawings and prints a generation earlier).

In Perils of the Sea, he focused on two women to convey the distress caused by the unpredictable whims of nature. From the shore, they scan the horizon for their absent loved ones and anticipate their uncertain return with an anxiety echoed by the dim skies and turbulent waves. There is a same-titled watercolor of this subject from 1881 now in the Clark Art Institute, Williamstown. Goodrich 98.