● On view now — Gallery 161
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Long inspired by the sea, Winslow Homer spent time in 1881 in a fishing community in Tynemouth, England. The experience fundamentally changed his life and work. His paintings thereafter focused almost exclusively on humankind’s age-old contest with nature. In The Herring Net , executed in Prouts Neck, Maine, Homer depicted the heroic efforts of fishermen at their daily work. In a small dory, one figure hauls in glistening herring, while the other, possibly a boy, unloads the catch. Laboring far from the schooners on the horizon, the pair strives to steady the precarious boat as it rides the incoming swells.
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Rafel Govertsz. Camphuysen (Dutch, 1597/98–1657) — An Estuar
Joseph Mallord William Turner — Fishing Boats with Hucksters
After Eugène Isabey — Shipwreck
Louis Meijer — Storm in the Strait of Dover
Jules Dupré — Barks Fleeing Before the Storm
Emil Carlsen — Nantasket Beach
Frank K. M. Rehn (American, 1848–1914) — An October Day
Emanuel de Witte — The Nieuwe Vismarkt (New Fish Market) in
Gustave Courbet — The Fishing Boat
Hendrik Willem Mesdag — Kalme zee
Greek Pirates Attacking a Turkish Vessel