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Catalogue Entry

inv. 402
Christmas Cove
c.1863
Oil on canvas
15 1/2 x 24 in. (39.4 x 61 cm)
Private collection, on loan to the Portland Museum of Art
Commentary

Many of Lane’s paintings of the 1860s, particularly of Maine, are the culminating works of his career. The decade long trend since the early 1850s of simplifying composition, paring down of detail and the primacy of light and atmosphere are all at work in this exquisite painting of 1863.

Lane uses his familiar reverse Z composition, leading the eye into the painting from the lower right center following the water up to the anchored hermaphrodite brig and island. He then turns you left around the island as the reflected light thickens on the sea and then leads the eye right to the horizon. It’s likely a dawn view with the sun rising from the open ocean beyond the islands. While the subject is the dawn light spreading across the sea in all its spectacular gradations, note the two devices with which he enlivens the composition. On the left side he has the dead tree leaning away from the other verticals, creating an energetic diagonal that also leads the eye down to the water where the eye enters the painting. As you follow the dark line of the island on the left towards the center, he has placed a lone heron standing on the rock silhouetted against the glowing water. Every aspect of the scene is at rest, yet there is an expectant energy emanating from the glowing sun reaching across the water but not yet warming the cool shadows behind the islands. The ship becomes just another aspect of nature, sails hanging still and silent, waiting for the day to awaken it.

The locale is not Christmas Cove, which is a cove south of the Penobscot Bay that doesn’t have any islands or configurations that would fit this view. It is rumored to have been titled by a dealer trying to sell the picture to a Christmas Cove summer resident. Penobscot Bay, where Lane cruised extensively on his summer trips, is full of small islands that look like these. While Lane likely sketched islands very similar to this, this view could be a pastiche of remembered elements as a brig of this size would have a hard time maneuvering into the tight spot amongst the rocks as he has shown, nor would any sensible captain try. Regardless, it’s an exquisite depiction of a scene that embodies the “luminous” and “transcendent” qualities so often seen in Lane’s best work.

– Sam Holdsworth

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Historical Materials

Below is historical information related to the Lane work above. To see complete information on a subject on the Historical Materials page, click on the subject name (in bold and underlined).
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Christmas Cove, Maine, is a village at Rutherford Island, now part of the town of South Bristol, Maine. It is said to have been named by Captain John Smith when he visited in on Christmas Day, 1614 during his exploration of the Maine coast.

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"Penobscot Bay is Maine's grandest stretch of water, and its largest, measuring 20 miles across from Whitehead Island to Isle au Haut and trending 30 miles north to the mouth of its equally superlative namesake river. Encompassing almost 1000 miles of shoreline and encircling 624 islands and ledges, Penobscot Bay is also the second-largest embayment on the east coast of the United States, after Chesapeake Bay. Giovanni da Verrazano, an early explorer, captivated by the site of the bay's channels and islands, wrote "all near the continent; small and pleasant in appearance, but high, following the curve of the land; some beautiful ports and channels are formed between them, such as those in the Adriatic Gulf in Illyria and Dalmatia…"

Penobscot Bay was, in every respect, a maritime community in the nineteenth century. The Island Kingdoms, with their cod fisheries, shipyards, and small farms, were tied commercially and economically to such large ports on the mainland as Rockland, Belfast, Bangor, Castine, and small ports of Mount Desert. The Islanders owned their own small fleets of coasters, finding cargo all along the coast, from the Maritimes to Portland and beyond. The glue that held this community together was family, extended family, there were no strangers in Penobscot Bay, among the coastal towns, or among the islands, for family members, as shipwrights, sailors, fishermen, merchants, and farmers, or by the simple act of marriage, formed close knit bonds which established a unique maritime culture.

– Mark Honey

References:

Conkling, Philip W, "Islands in Time," A Natural and Cultural History of the Islands of the Gulf of Maine, Island Institute, Rockland, and Downeast Books, Camden, page 64.

Honey, Mark E, "Abigail & Sarah Hawes of Castine," Navigators & Educators, with Lois Moore Cyr, 1996.

Honey, Mark E, "Before the Mast," Volume IV, articles 7-9, Holbrook Island and the Holbrook family, and in particular, Robert Applebee, "Vessels of the Penobscot Customs District," Stephan Phillips Memorial Library, Penobscot Marine Museum, Searsport, which source also has the diaries of Capt. Jonathan Holbrook and the genealogy of the Holbrook family in the Priscilla Jones collection. The "Before the Mass" series can be found in the collections of the Castine Historical Society and the Wilson Museum, both in Castine.

Honey, Mark E, "King Pine, Queen Spruce, Jack Tar," An Intimate History of Lumbering on the Union River, Volumes 1-5. This source, in its entirety, lays down the foundation of Downeast Maine's unique culture which was built upon pine lumber and timber, the cod fisheries, coasting, shipbuilding, and the interrelationships of family and community. 

Jellison, Connee, "Hancock County," a rock found paradise, A Bicentennial Pictorial, The Donning Company, Norfolk, Virginia, 1990.

McLane, Charles B, and McLane, Carol Evarts, "Islands of the Mid-Maine Coast," Penobscot Bay, Volume 1, Revised Edition, Tilbury House, Publishers, Gardiner, Maine, and the Island Institute, Rockland, Maine.

McLane, Charles B, and McLane, Carol Evarts, "Islands of the Mid-Maine Coast," Mount Desert to Machias Bay, Volume 2, The Kennebec River club Press, Incorporated, Falmouth, 1989.

 

chart
Chart of fishing grounds from Penobscot Bay to Cape Ann
c. 1850
Chart
Fishery Industries of the United States, Sect. 3

Also filed under: Fishing »

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chart
Chart showing Lane's location for drawings made in 1850
Erik Ronnberg/U.S. Coast Survey chart
c. 1875
Chart
U.S. Coast Survey
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chart
Chart showing Lane's location for drawings made in 1851
Erik Ronnberg/U.S. Coast Survey chart
c. 1875
Chart
U.S. Coast Survey
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chart
Chart showing Lane's location for drawings made in 1855
Erik Ronnberg/U.S. Coast Survey chart
c. 1875
Chart
U.S. Coast Survey
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chart
Chart showing route of Lane's 1852 cruise from Castine to Bar Harbor
Erik Ronnberg/US Coast Survey chart
c. 1875
Chart
U.S. Coast Survey

Chart with key showing the route of an excursion on the sloop "Superior" out of Castine made by William H. Witherle, Lane, Stevens and friends during which Lane made several sketches of Mt. Desert scenery. The trip was chronicled by Witherle in his diary of 1852.

Image: Erik Ronnberg
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map
Topographical Map of Hancock County Maine
H. F. Walling
1860
Wilson Museum, Castine, Maine.
Library of Congress Catalog Number 2011588006

1860 map, including census of towns. 

Image: Library of Congress

Also filed under: Castine »   //  Maps »   //  Mount Desert Island & Rock »

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Hermaphrodite brigs—more commonly called half-brigs by American seamen and merchants—were square-rigged only on the fore mast, the main mast being rigged with a spanker and a gaff-topsail. Staysails were often set between the fore and main masts, there being no gaff-rigged sail on the fore mast. (1)

The half-brig was the most common brig type used in the coasting trade and appears often in Lane’s coastal and harbor scenes. The type was further identified by the cargo it carried, if it was conspicuously limited to a specialized trade. Lumber brigs (see Shipping in Down East Waters, 1854 (inv. 212) and View of Southwest Harbor, Maine: Entrance to Somes Sound, 1852 (inv. 260)) and hay brigs (see Lighthouse at Camden, Maine, 1851 (inv. 320)) were recognizable by their conspicuous deck loads. Whaling brigs were easily distinguished by their whaleboats carried on side davits (see ). (2)

 – Erik Ronnberg

References:

1. M.H. Parry, et al., Aaak to Zumbra: A Dictionary of the World's Watercraft Newport News, VA: The Mariners’ Museum, 2000), 268, 274; and A Naval Encyclopaedia (L.R. Hamersly & Co., 1884. Reprint: Detroit, MI: Gale Research Company, 1971), 93, under "Brig-schooner."

2. W.H. Bunting, An Eye for the Coast (Gardiner, ME: Tilbury House: 1998), 52–54, 68–69; and W.H. Bunting, A Day's Work, part 1 (Gardiner, ME: Tilbury House: 1997), 52.

photo (historical)
Canadian Brig "Ohio" in East Gloucester
c.1910
Photograph

Canadian brig "Ohio" iced in off Reed & Gamage Wharf, East Gloucester.

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photo (historical)
A half brig being towed to the Bay in New York Harbor
George Stacy
1859–60
Photograph
Johnson, H. and Lightfoot, F.S.: Maritime New York in Nineteenth-Century Photographs, Dover Publications, Inc., New York
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illustration
Hermaphrodite Brig
Engraving in R. H. Dana, The Seaman's Friend, 13th ed. (Thomas Groom & Co. Publisher, 1873)

An hermaphrodite brig is square-rigged at her foremast; but has no top, and only fore-and-aft sails at her main mast.

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artwork
Lumber Brig in High Seas
Fitz Henry Lane
n.d.
Oil on canvas
10 1/8 x 16 in.
Cape Ann Museum, Gloucester, Mass., Gift of the Estate of Anne K. Garland, 1990 (2676.00)

Detail of lumber brig.

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artwork
Silhouettes of vessel types
Charles G. Davis
Book illustrations from "Shipping and Craft in Silhouette" by Charles G. Davis, Salem, Mass. Marine Research Society, 1929. Selected images
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Provenance (Information known to date; research ongoing.)
Ms. Johnson (?), Rhode Island
Childs Gallery, Boston, Massachusetts, 1973
Private collection, 1974
Exhibition History
1976 Museum of Modern Art
The Museum of Modern Art, New York, The Natural Paradise: Painting in America 1800–1950, October 1–November 30, 1976. (McShine 1976).
1980 National Gallery of Art
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., American Light: The Luminist Movement, 1850–1875, February 10–June 15, 1980. (Exhibition catalogue: Wilmerding 1980a).
1988 National Gallery of Art
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., Paintings by Fitz Hugh Lane, May 15–September 5, 1988, no. 53, ill. in color, 121, as Christmas Cove. Traveled to: Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, October 5–December 31, 1988.
2015 Portland Museum of Art
Portland Museum of Art, Portland, Maine, A Magnificent Stillness: American Art from a Private Collection, June 26–November 8, 2015. (Sherry 2015).
Published References
Wilmerding 1971a
Wilmerding, John. Fitz Hugh Lane. New York: Praeger, 1971, ill. fig. 87.
McShine 1976
McShine, Kynaston. The Natural Paradise: Painting in America 1800–1950. New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 1976. Exhibition catalogue (1976 Museum of Modern Art), ill., p. 78.
Wilmerding 1980a
Wilmerding, John, ed. American Light: The Luminist Movement, 1850–1875. Washington, DC: National Gallery of Art, 1980. Exhibition catalogue (1980 National Gallery of Art), ill., fig. 35, p. 43, text, p. 111.
Wilmerding 1988a
Wilmerding, John. Paintings by Fitz Hugh Lane. Washington, DC: National Gallery of Art; in association with Harry N. Abrams, 1988. Exhibition catalogue, p.121, cat. 53, as Christmas Cove.
Wilmerding 1994
Wilmerding, John. "Fitz Hugh Lane." The Artist's Mount Desert: American Painters on the Maine Coast. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1994, p.64.
Conron 2000
Conron, John. American Picturesque. College Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2000, ill., fig. 19.
Wilmerding 2005
Wilmerding, John. Fitz Henry Lane. Gloucester, MA: Cape Ann Historical Association, 2005, ill. 87, text, p. 81.
Sherry 2015
Sherry, Karen A. A Magnificent Stillness: American Art from a Private Collection. Portland: Portland Museum of Art, 2015. Exhibition brochure (2015 Portland Museum of Art), ill. pl. 6, p.7, text p.5, as Christmas Cove.
Related Historical Materials

Maine Locales & Buildings

Vessel Types

Record last updated August 8, 2022. Please note that the information on this and all pages is periodically reviewed and subject to change.
Citation: "Christmas Cove, c.1863 (inv. 402)." In Fitz Henry Lane Online. Gloucester, MA: Cape Ann Museum. www.fitzhenrylaneonline.org/catalogue/entry.php?id=402 (accessed on August 24, 2025).