THE LIFELINE
by Winslow Homer
After Homer's
return to America in 1883, the sea became the dominant theme in his work. He
moved to Prouts Neck, a fishing village on the bleak, desolate coast of Maine.
He traveled extensively but always returned to his Prouts Neck studio to convert
his sketches into major paintings. Solitude became for Homer not simply a preference
but an absolute necessity, as he turned his mind and his art to subjects dealing
with man's fate in confronting the elemental forces of nature. In the summer
of 1883 Homer saw a demonstration in Atlantic City of the use of a breeches
buoy for rescue from the sea. The following year he painted his large, impressive,
and immediately popular painting "The Life Line" (1884), one of several he
did at this time on the rescue theme, depicting the dramatic transfer of an
unconscious woman from a wrecked ship to shore.