Dories at Low Tide: Ipswich River

Dories at Low Tide: Ipswich River

A contemporary of famed Ipswich artist Arthur Wesley Dow, who also employed the cyanotype process during the 1890’s and into the early 1900’s, Dexter was undoubtedly influenced by him, and both took photographs of boats like these along the Ipswich River.

George G. Dexter: 1862-1927

Ipswich commercial photographer known to have published tourist postcards around the turn of the 20th Century (cyanotypes, and halftones engraved The Dexter Studio, Ipswich, Mass.) with some of his images, including a whimsical exaggeration showing an outrageously large clam resting on a luggage cart parked outside the Ipswich Railroad station. In the 1896 edition of the Directory of The Town of Ipswich, he took out an advertisement (p. 52) proclaiming himself “Dexter The Photographer”, with the following copy:

The facts that we always guarantee perfect satisfaction, are willing to devote enough time to each sitting; to secure the best results; have one of the most throughly (sic) equipped studios in the state and are always Up-to-Date with new styles, account for our continued increase of work.

George Dexter built a Queen Ann style home in 1893 which still stands at 15 Argilla Road in Ipswich. The home is said to feature a separate outbuilding that was used by him as a photo studio.

He is further mentioned in a volume of cyanotypes taken by Dow titled Ipswich Days- Arthur Wesley Dow and his Hometown:

The photographers in Dow’s circle there included his brother, Dana; Everett Hubbard; George Dexter (a successful commercial photographer in Ipswich); and the amateur ornithologist Dr. Charles Wendell Townsend. I am grateful to Stephanie Gaskins for her thoughts on this subject.” (1.)

  1. Excerpt, Trevor Fairbrother: 2007- Addison Gallery of American Art, Phillips Academy, Andover Massachusetts: citation #39 discussing Dow’s photographic circle in Ipswich.

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Sea & Shore

Title
Dories at Low Tide: Ipswich River
Photographer
Country
Medium
Ephemera
Year
Dimensions

Support Dimensions7.9 x 13.8 cm

Print Notes

Ca. 1900-05 unposted, undivided back cyanotype rppc Postal Card: Authorized By Act of Congress May 19 1893

Exhibitions | Collections

Unknown location on the River: from George Dexter’s Early Photos of Ipswich published on Historic Ipswich website. “Perhaps the best-known early Ipswich Photographer was George Dexter (1862-1927). His photographs along with those of Edward Lee Darling (1874-1962) provide a wonderful visual history of the town. The late Robert Cronin, an Ipswich native, shared with me his collection of George Dexter glass plate negatives that had been in storage for almost 100 years, These digital images were created from the glass plates.”