Launching Boats Across a Reef Opposite to Mount Conybeare. And Distant View of the British Chain of Mountains.
Description:
Two groups of men drag rowboats over a rocky “reef,” which seems to be serving as a dam between one body of water (placid-looking) and another (which appears to be the sea). A strong curving line created by the reef extends from the immediate foreground towards a jagged mountain chain in the far background, referred to as the “British Chain of Mountains” in the subtitle.
Copyright:
Copyright 2009, Department of Special Collections, Memorial Library, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI
Location:
Accession Number:
Thordarson T 1872
Height (in centimeters):
12
Width (in centimeters):
19
Printing Context
In his book, Arctic Spectacles: The Frozen North in Visual Culture, 1818-1875 (2007), Russell A. Potter writes: "Beginning with the Buchan expedition to the North Pole in 1818 (on which then Lieutenant John Franklin served as second officer), nearly every expedition licensed the sketches of its artistically inclined officers to panorama exhibitors.” This was partially a by-product of the fact that “for each major expedition” that the Admiralty launched, “an official representation had to be provided, not just textually but also visually”—that is, the narrative examined here. Meanwhile, panoramas (an “all-encompassing” visual technology for which Robert Barker first received his patent in 1796) were “almost exactly coeval with [the] public fascination with the North” (Potter 5-7). Indeed, Potter contends that the Arctic was “the most ‘sublime and awful’ spectacle of that already spectacular era,” which fact was emphasized by the “60 Arctic shows—including 22 moving panoramas, 3 fixed panoramas, 12 lantern expeditions, 4 mechanical automata theaters, and 4 exhibitions of “Esquimaux” or Arctic natives” between 1818 and 1883” (12).Associated Events
Founding of the Society of Painters in Water-Colours (1804)With the formation only in 1804 of the Society of Painters in Water-Colours, this medium of painting was not commonly thought of in the years of Back’s youth as a professional art. But at the close of the 19th century the transition began to occur from topographical draughtsmanship, which the academies taught military students, to picturesque renditions of nature. (Maclaren 293)
Associated Places
Mount ConybeareAssociated Texts
Sir George Back variously painted or drew his images while on his expeditions, depending on the weather; in very cold temperatures his paints would freeze, so they were frequently rendered useless. These originals appear to be scattered among various private collections.Subject
With its sweeping line of rock, startling juxtaposition of distant landscape with the nearer scene, and diminutive figures wrestling their boats over the "reef," this image is at once a picturesque re-visioning of a landscape and a record of exploration intended to reinforce British imperialist vision and scientific study.Theme
Picturesque. British. Landscape. Exploration. Arctic.Significance
I.S. Maclaren argues that:[T]he picturesque convention . . . seems at odds with the remarkable labor being performed under trying and sometimes extreme conditions. But this is an oddity inherent in description generally, for a descriptive passage nearly always suspends the impetus of narrative, not unlike the way that an illustration complements a narrative of exploration by interrupting its impetus. Part of this disjunction in mood between the momentary landscape enthusiast’s remarks and the explorer’s ongoing account arises because the making of a ‘scene’ or ‘view’ demands a standing back from the object of observation in order to make sense of it, to endue it with meaning; in short, to identify it. (292)Notwithstanding Maclaren’s somewhat facile equation of the arresting of a scene with “description generally,” it is true that expedition imagery, especially when compared with accompanying narratives, can appear incongruently portrayed. Yet from Back’s descriptive title to the elevated viewpoint and extensive near-far movement, this image is clearly an "interruption" or "impetus," even as it visually describes the explorers' "ongoing" and "remarkable labor." As such, it is exemplary of Back's comprehensive aesthetic approach, which rather inconsistently sees the Arctic as both compellingly beautiful and picturesque—Back uses the word throughout his narrative—and as maddeningly difficult to traverse.
Function
Stuart C. Houston notes that:The world’s greatest naval power and its underemployed navy after the end of the Napoleonic Wars found the continued presence of large blank areas on the world map an irresistible challenge. John Barrow, the powerful second secretary to the Admiralty, had strong backing from the newly important scientific community to renew the search for the Northwest Passage after a long wartime hiatus. (xiv)In addition to simply providing visual aids for a travel narrative, then, Back’s images must be seen as integral to the literal illustration of those “large blank areas” that Britain wanted to conquer. Expedition imagery during the Romantic period addressed other needs as well, including the translation of “otherness”—which the Arctic so easily exemplified in its comparatively uninhabited starkness—into a culturally understandable, and thus accessible, space for national expansionism and the application of identity. Furthermore, in ostensibly drawing accurate portrayals of the landscape (which Franklin frequently confirms), Back created scientific records designed to both titillate and inform the British public and scientific community.
Bibliography
Ames, Van Meter. “John Dewey as Aesthetician.” The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 12.2 (1953): 145-68. Print.Long Title
Narrative of a second expedition to the shores of the Polar Sea in the years 1825, 1826, and 1827, by John Franklin, Captain R.N., F.R.S., &c. and commander of the expedition, including an account of the progress of a detachment to the eastward by John Richardson, M.D., F.R.S., F.L.S., &c., surgeon and naturalist to the expedition, illustrated by numerous plates and maps, published by authority of the right honourable the secretary of state for colonial affairs, London: John Murray, Albemarle-Street, 1828.Featured in Exhibit:
Engraver:
Delineator:
Image Date:
1828
Publisher:
John Murray