Deer Island Light, Boston Harbor

Deer Island Light, Boston Harbor

Perhaps an early morning view, with the Sun shrouded by fog on the horizon, the Deer Island Lighthouse emerges from Boston Harbor, firmly planted on a reef extending 1500’ south of Deer Island. Originally a stone beacon when established in 1832, it was replaced by this “sparkplug” type lighthouse in 1890, which survived until being replaced by a fiberglass tower in 1982. Wikipedia states “the 1890 light cost about $50,000. It included a three-story dwelling, a veranda with boat davits, and a circular parapet. The water supply was a cistern in the base of the structure. A spiral staircase ran from the cellar to the top floor. It had a fixed white light, which was changed to flashing red every thirty seconds and then to the present alternating red and white flashes.”

Arthur Hammond: 1880-1962

Born in London, photographer Arthur Hammond arrived in America at Ellis Island on July 31, 1909 and quickly established his own studio in Natick Massachusetts by 1912- joining and exhibiting with the nearby Boston Camera Club. By 1920, he had authored the foundational book Pictorial Composition in Photography and became a leading voice for pictorialism in America through his position as associate editor of American Photography magazine from 1918-1949.

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Sea & Shore

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Deer Island Light, Boston Harbor
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Dimensions

Image Dimensions18.7 x 23.9 cm corner-glued to leaf

Support Dimensions25.0 x 32.6 cm Black album leaf

Print Notes

Recto: Foxing to areas of print, small surface losses to print in sky; title of work supplied by this archive.

Provenance

Acquired by this archive in March, 2018 from Memphis, TN dealer who stated it came from a Memphis estate ca. late 1990’s.