Corn Husking at Nantucket
Eastman Johnson, ca. 1875
About this artwork
Eastman Johnson's *Corn Husking at Nant* (ca. 1875) captures a lively communal gathering on the Massachusetts island famed for its whaling heritage. This large-scale oil on canvas (27 5/8 x 54 1/2 in.) depicts a crowd engaged in the fall tradition of corn husking—a social event blending labor and festivity in 19th-century rural New England. Johnson's keen eye for everyday American life transforms this genre scene into a vibrant tableau of community bonds, with figures animated in shared purpose under open skies. As a master of American Realism, Johnson elevated ordinary moments to celebrate national identity in the post-Civil War era. His meticulous oil technique—rich in texture and warm earth tones—brings depth to the expansive composition, emphasizing human connection amid agricultural rhythms. Housed in The Metropolitan Museum of Art's American Wing, this Rogers Fund acquisition (1907) highlights the cultural shift toward romanticizing agrarian roots as industrialization loomed. Fun fact: Nantucket's isolation fostered tight-knit traditions like husking bees, where neighbors competed playfully to find the lucky red ear of corn, symbolizing romance. Johnson's work invites viewers to savor these vanishing rituals.