An online project under the direction of the CAPE ANN MUSEUM
About the Project
Fitz Henry Lane Online is a freely-accessible interactive and interdisciplinary online resource created by the Cape Ann Museum. The website is organized around a catalogue of the paintings, drawings, and lithographs of nineteenth-century American painter Fitz Henry Lane (1804–1865). The Cape Ann Museum, located in Gloucester, Massachusetts, (Lane’s birthplace and home for most of his life) has the world’s largest collection of Lane’s paintings, drawings, lithographs, and related archival material. The website is intended to provide information of interest to a broad audience, and to serve as a resource for study of Lane’s work. The website focuses on both the formal, aesthetic qualities and the historical context of Lane's pictures.
Art-historical writing and scholarship on Lane only began in the late 1940s after his “re-discovery” from decades of obscurity after his death when American art tastes gravitated towards European and modern art. John I.H. Baur and Alfred Mansfield Brooks were some of the earliest writers on Lane, followed by John Wilmerding, who published the first monograph on Lane in 1964, followed by another in 1971, and culminating in the 1988 catalogue of the comprehensive Lane exhibition at the National Gallery of Art. Barbara Novak, Theodore Stebbins, Franklin Kelly, Elizabeth Garrity Ellis, Earl Powell and others did groundbreaking work on all aspects of nineteenth-century American art, including Lane’s work. Wherever possible, particularly in the commentaries attached to each entry, we have tried to expose readers to this insightful and beautifully written work via quotations, references, or direct links to the original work, most of which is now out of print and hard to find. The goal of the project is to provide a resource of historical materials and past scholarship in order to encourage a new generation of scholars and historians to build upon it. One of the advantages of an online resource is that new information can be added at any time. It is intended that this site will evolve as writers, historians, and art scholars pursue new research and use this site as a forum and important resource for the work of Fitz Henry Lane and the related art and history of mid-nineteenth-century New England.
The catalogue raisonné component of Fitz Henry Lane Online will be a catalogue of all Lane’s paintings, drawings, and lithographs. At the date of publication (February 15, 2016), this list includes over 300 works: all of the known paintings, drawings, and lithographs in public collections. As research continues, works from private collections will be added in increments as will more information on Lane’s student and sometime collaborator Mary Mellen.
With funding from the generous donors below, early conservation and curatorial work by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and conservation work donated by the Cleveland Museum of Art, the website now includes hundreds of high-resolution images, including details and conservation (infrared, x-ray, and magnified) images; provenance records; selected exhibition and literature histories; annotated entries for key works; and extensive historical materials related to the subjects of Lane’s pictures. This project could not have been launched without the tireless contributions of project and Cape Ann Museum staff and the wide circle of advisors and volunteers who have so generously devoted their time and expertise, for which we are ever grateful.
–Sam Holdsworth
Project staff:
Martha Oaks
Cape Ann Museum Henrietta Gates & Heaton Robertson Chief Curator
Leon Doucette
Cape Ann Museum Assistant Curator
Victoria Petway
Editorial Administrator
panOpticon
Roger Shepherd, Susannah Shepherd, Jessie Sentivan
Authors (arranged alphabetically):
Alison Anholt
Fitz Henry Lane Online Rights & Reproductions
Stephanie Buck
Cape Ann Museum Librarian & Archivist
A. Sam Davidson
Independent maritime scholar
Sarah Dunlap
Gloucester City Archives Historian
Sam Holdsworth
Fitz Henry Lane Online Project Director
Mark Honey
Independent Maine scholar
Meredith Massar Munson
Independent scholar
Mary Rhinelander McCarl
Independent scholar, Cape Ann Museum
Travers Newton
Independent scholar
Martha Oaks
Cape Ann Museum Curator
Pieter Rhynhart
Independent scholar
Erik Ronnberg
Cape Ann Museum Adjunct Maritime Curator
Catharina Slautterback
Curator of Prints & Photographs, Boston Athenaeum
Moyna Stanton
Conservator of Paper, Cleveland Museum of Art
Marcia Steele
Senior Conservator of Paintings, Cleveland Museum of Art
Melissa Geisler Trafton
Fitz Henry Lane Online Adjunct Curator
With gratitude to the following individuals and institutions who have shared their time and expertise with this project:
Sam Holdsworth
Fitz Henry Lane Online Project Director & Editor
Melissa Geisler Trafton
Fitz Henry Lane Online Adjunct Curator & Managing Editor
John Wilmerding
Fitz Henry Lane Online Senior Advisor; Prof. Emeritus, Princeton University
Alison Anholt
Fitz Henry Lane Online Rights & Reproductions Manager, Designer
Cindy Amero
Fitz Henry Lane Online Administration
Frances Fitch
Fitz Henry Lane Online Project Copy Editor
Lauren Hewes, Jackie Penny
The American Antiquarian Society
Jeremy d'Entremont
American Lighthouse Foundation and New England Lighthouses
Ashlee Bailey
Catharina Slautterback, Pat Boulos
The Boston Athenaeum
Paige Lilly
Castine Historical Society
Stephanie Buck, Fred Buck, Ronda Faloon, Molly O'Hagan Hardy, Courtney Richardson, Erik Ronnberg
Cape Ann Museum
Marcia Steele, Moyna Stanton, Joan Neubecker
The Cleveland Museum of Art
Sarah Dunlap
Gloucester City Archives
Claudia Jew
The Mariners' Museum
Karen Quinn, Jean Woodward, Sue Bell
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Dan Finamore
Peabody Essex Museum
Lisa Peters
Spanierman Gallery
Barbara Rathburn
The Shelburne Museum
Courtney Kopplin
Vose Galleries
Abby Dunham
The Wilson Museum, Castine
With gratitude to donors to the project:
Glenys and Kermit Birchfield
Jackie and J.J. Bell
Mollie and John Byrnes
Diane Chen and Jan Koch-Weser
Bonnie and Chris Covington
Frederick Dulles
Cathy and Peter Halstead
Jenifer and Dan McDougall
Deborah and Thomas T. Riquier
Margaret and Chip Ziering
Website design and database software bydedicated to the art of cataloging art.
The Cape Ann Museum is grateful to the following organizations,
as well as to contributors to the Museum's capital campaign, for their support of the project.
This project was made possible in part by: