BRUNSWICK, ME.- The Bowdoin College Museum of Art has acquired a late 19th-century Mawson & Swan camera originally owned by the renowned American artist Winslow Homer (1836-1910). The quarter-size dry plate camera, manufactured around 1880, is a significant addition to the Museums robust collection of archival material and over 100 vintage photographs related to Homers life and work. It will also serve as the centerpiece for the BCMAs upcoming special exhibition on Homer and photography, planned to open in August 2015. The camera was donated to the BCMA by Neal Paulsen, a long-time resident of Scarborough, Maine.
We are so pleased to receive this exciting gift, which complements our current holdings of Homers work and documentation perfectly, said Frank Goodyear, Co-Director of the Bowdoin College Museum of Art. The camera highlights Homers varying artistic interests, and helps to illuminate a lesser-known side of one of Americas greatest painters.
Sold by Mawson & Swan, a photography business in Newcastle-on-Tyne, England, the camera was designed for the serious amateur rather than the studio professional, and was notable at the time for its portability and ease of use. The camera produced images that were approximately 3 x 4 inches. Homer purchased this model in 1882, during a two-year residence in Cullercoats, a small fishing village in northeast England that is less than ten miles from Newcastle-on-Tyne. The dateAug 15, 1882and the artists initials are inscribed into the cameras wooden plate holder, likely by Homer himself.
Homer spent his final decades living with his extended family on a large estate in Prouts Neck, Maine. He constructed a studio on the estate as well, and it was here, where Homer painted some of his most iconic works that capture the beauty of the Maine coastline and the power of the sea. The Winslow Homer Collection at the BCMA includes photographs taken at the artists home in Prouts Neck that are similar to those produced by the Mawson & Swan camera. The BCMAs exhibition will bring forward many of the photographs in Bowdoins collectiontogether with loansand will allow scholars to continue to investigate the compelling and complex history around Homers work in photography.
Paulsen acquired the Mawson & Swan camera from his grandfather Weston H. Snow in the 1950s, and exhibited the camera at Scarborough High School for more than two decades. Snow, an electrician and a great admirer of Homers work, acquired the camera from Homers nephew Charles L. Homer in exchange for electrical work. The Museums acquisition follows a major recent gift to the BCMA from the celebrated collection of Dorothy and Herbert (Herb) Vogel earlier this year and further strengthens the Museums dynamic acquisition program.