The panel and the earlier easel painting differ only a little. The easel painting is nearly square, has more sky, and less land at the left. The panel has lighter colors, and there are more of them, as in the touches of violet, green, and gold in the water. The surf is also whiter on the panel. The rocky headland is less clearly defined, however, and Metcalf eliminated some small boats that were near the far shore in the easel painting. Both paintings are compelling portrayals of the meeting of land, sea, and sky that humans often sense as elemental and profound. (A painting of another island in Maine by Old Lyme artist Charles Ebert of Monhegan Headlands in the Museum’s collection is another variation on the theme.)

Willard Metcalf in Old Lyme
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Artist Facts: |
Willard Leroy Metcalf
Born July 1, 1858, Lowell, Massachusetts
Died March 9, 1925, New York, New York
In Old Lyme, 1905-1907 |
 Willard Leroy Metcalf (1858-1925)
Ebbing Tide, Version 2, 1907
Oil on canvas
Collection of Farnsworth Museum, Rockland, Maine
Gift of the Estate of Mrs. Sylvania Benson Lawson, 1982
 Charles Ebert (1873-1959)
Monhegan Headlands, 1909
Oil on canvas
Gift of Miss Elisabeth Ebert
It was in July 1907 that Metcalf’s young wife ran off from the Griswold House with fellow art colonist Robert Nisbet, a former student of Metcalf’s. Devastated and humiliated, Metcalf also left Old Lyme soon afterward and headed for Southport, Maine. On August 20 he wrote to Florence Griswold and informed her that he was suffering “a slight indisposition of the nerves” and would stay with his artist friend Frank Benson at North Haven, Maine. Benson and his family gave Metcalf much needed comfort, and he gave them the painting of Penobscot Bay that he completed during his stay and chose to replicate on this panel. |