File:Diana and Chase in the Arctic.jpg
Original file (1,954 × 1,408 pixels, file size: 608 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
Captions
Summary
[edit]James H. Wheldon: Diana and Chase in the Arctic | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Artist |
artist QS:P170,Q20278688 |
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Title |
Diana and Chase in the Arctic label QS:Len,"Diana and Chase in the Arctic" |
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Object type |
painting object_type QS:P31,Q3305213 |
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Description |
Diana and Chase in the Arctic, oil on canvas, 65.5 in x 90.5 in. Original in Hull Maritime Museum. The ships are whalers. From the History of Art Research Portal: "Wheldon depicts a variety of Arctic fauna for the taking, including the now familiar narwhals, valued for their unicorn-like horns, swimming into the canvas bottom right; walruses, valued for their blubber, bobbing the water, centre right, and about to be shot top right; and seals being clubbed on the right. In addition, a number of whales are being hunted in the waters surrounding the ships. Two polar bears on a repouissoir ice floe, meanwhile, adopt the positions of many spectators within eighteenth-century landscape paintings, to which the canvas is also indebted. Wheldon's violent canvas registers the shift, in the Arctic in this period, from whaling to sealing and walrus hunting, as the principle source of blubber. As a result, it may represent the first of two annual voyages north by Hull whalers, the first and earlier voyage predominantly in search of seals. Whilst full of violence, the picture gives little sense of the scale of the carnage, with individual whale ships often killing up to two thousand seals a day, and with reports of seals clubbed so carelessly and skinned so quickly that they remained alive on the ice, without their skins until they froze to death. Wheldon’s foreground narwhals and walruses are also newly sentimentalised, perhaps responding to the increasingly fashionable work of royal favourite, Edwin Landseer, although Wheldon's polar bears are about as far as possible from the protagonists in Landseer’s later, bleak Man Proposes, God Disposes (1864). "1857, the year in which the canvas was probably painted, represented a key year when it came to the question of animal fats destined to become lubricants. Rebellion across the Indian subcontinent that year were partly prompted by rumours that the native sepoys would be forced to lubricate their guns with cow and pig fat; cows being sacred to the Hindu soldiers, and pigs deemed unclean by Muslim sepoys." |
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Date |
circa 1857 date QS:P571,+1857-00-00T00:00:00Z/9,P1480,Q5727902 |
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Medium |
oil on canvas medium QS:P186,Q296955;P186,Q12321255,P518,Q861259 |
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Dimensions |
height: 65.5 in (166.3 cm); width: 90.5 in (229.8 cm) dimensions QS:P2048,65.5U218593 dimensions QS:P2049,90.5U218593 |
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Collection |
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Source/Photographer | History of Art Research Portal |
Licensing
[edit]
This is a faithful photographic reproduction of a two-dimensional, public domain work of art. The work of art itself is in the public domain for the following reason:
The official position taken by the Wikimedia Foundation is that "faithful reproductions of two-dimensional public domain works of art are public domain".
This photographic reproduction is therefore also considered to be in the public domain in the United States. In other jurisdictions, re-use of this content may be restricted; see Reuse of PD-Art photographs for details. |
File history
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Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
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current | 01:45, 16 March 2021 | 1,954 × 1,408 (608 KB) | SlimVirgin (talk | contribs) | {{Information |Description= |Source= |Date= |Author= |Permission= |other_versions= }} | |
01:42, 16 March 2021 | 1,954 × 1,424 (613 KB) | SlimVirgin (talk | contribs) | {{Information |Description= |Source= |Date= |Author= |Permission= |other_versions= }} | ||
22:11, 11 January 2019 | 800 × 578 (52 KB) | SlimVirgin (talk | contribs) | {{Information |Description=''The Diana and Chase in the Arctic'', oil on canvas, 65.5 in x 90.5 in. Original in Hull Maritime Museum. The ships are whalers. |Source=[https://hoaportal.york.ac.uk/hoaportal/turnerwhaleZoom.jsp?id=148 History of Art Research Portal] |Date=c. 1857 |Author=J. H. Wheldon |Permission= |other_versions= }} |
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