Upcoming 2025 Exhibition
Rockwell Kent, Sun, Manana, Monhegan, 1907, oil on canvas, Bowdoin College Museum of Art, Brunswick, Maine, Museum Purchase with Funds Donated Anonymously.
Art, Ecology, and the Resilience of a Maine Island: The Monhegan Wildlands
July 1, 2025 – September 30, 2025
With its rugged shoreline, magnificent Cathedral Woods, and rustic fishing village, Monhegan Island has long been a haven for artists drawn to the splendor of its ocean vistas and picturesque wildlands and for ecologists fascinated by its complex natural history. Over the last two centuries, artists and photographers have observed pastureland recolonized by white spruce, those white spruce devastated by parasitic dwarf mistletoe infestation, and, today, deciduous trees—birch, aspen and maple—coming to dominate declining white spruce woodlands. Scientists, too, have documented change on Monhegan, drawing upon the methodologies of forest ecology to describe what came before and to elucidate mechanisms shaping the trajectories of forest succession.
The extraordinary natural resilience displayed by the Monhegan Wildlands is only possible thanks to conservation-minded islanders, no one more so than Theodore Edison, who acquired much of the island outside of the village and conveyed it back to island residents with the formation of the Monhegan Associates. The broad arc of events on Monhegan—human settlement, the formation and abandonment of pastureland, forest recovery, and the critical importance of land conservation—are mirrored elsewhere along the Maine coast and the greater New England region. The story of Monhegan Island, however, is uniquely well told by artists, ecologists, and community members alike.
Monhegan’s history offers lessons for us all. This exhibition brings together artworks, objects and representations of ecological inquiry, and historical documents and photographs to chart forest conversion and recovery on the island. Milestone stewardship decisions animate the timeline as they set the island on the course to its present state of incipient deciduous stands set off against stately old-growth conifer forests. When given the opportunity, New England forests exhibit a remarkable ability to renew themselves; this is perhaps nowhere better demonstrated than Monhegan Island.
This exhibition is co-curated by Barry Logan, Samuel S. Butcher Professor in the Natural Sciences and Chair of Biology Department, Bowdoin College, Jennifer Pye, Director of the Monhegan Museum of Art & History, and Frank Goodyear, Co-Director of the Bowdoin College Museum of Art. It is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue published by Rizzoli Electa.
For more information about the Bowdoin College iteration of this exhibition, open from December 12, 2024 – July 1, 2025, visit their website: https://www.bowdoin.edu/art-museum/exhibitions/2024/monhegan-wildlands.html
CONSIDER SUPPORTING US
Your donations help us preserve Monhegan’s rich history for future generations.
LOCATION
Monhegan Museum of Art & History
1 Lighthouse Hill
Monhegan, ME 04852
Phone: 207.596.7003
Email: museum@monheganmuseum.org
HOURS
Museum Hours for the 2024 Season:
June 20-30 & September: 1-30:1:30-3:30pm daily
July and August: 11:30-3:30pm daily
2024 Lighthouse Tours: July, August: Tuesday, Thursday, & Sunday 11:30-1:30pm
September: Tuesday, Thursday, & Sunday 1:30-3:30pm
James Fitzgerald – Rockwell Kent Historic Artists' Home and Studio:
June 20-September 30: Tuesday, Thursday, & Sunday 1:00-3:00pm
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