The Eagle's Nest
About the Artwork
The Eagle's Nest is a late watercolor by Winslow Homer that distills the dramatic grandeur of the Maine coast into a vertical composition of striking power. Painted in 1902, when Homer was sixty-six, the work depicts a towering sea cliff with crashing waves below and a bald eagle perched confidently at its edge — a sentinel surveying a domain of rock, spray, and open ocean.
By this stage of his career, Homer had spent nearly two decades at Prouts Neck, Maine, and his mastery of watercolor was absolute. The medium's transparency and speed suited his ambition to capture the elemental forces of the North Atlantic coast, and in The Eagle's Nest he exploits every property of the medium: wet-into-wet passages convey the churning sea, dry brush strokes articulate the rough granite face, and areas of bare paper suggest the pale northern light. The eagle itself is rendered with an economy that borders on abstraction, yet its presence anchors the entire composition, lending the landscape a quality of watchful solitude.
The work belongs to the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, Massachusetts, where it stands as one of the finest examples of Homer's late watercolor practice.
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