Light

Light

from $150.00

All prints are handmade by Peter Ralston on archival rag paper with an archival ink set.

Small Matted Prints - This collection is printed on 8.5 x 11 inch sheets, matted, ready to be framed.

Sightings - This limited edition (LE) collection of 64 images is from Peter's 1997 book, Sightings. This edition is limited to 25 prints of each image plus five artist proofs (AP). They are printed on 17 x 22 inch sheets.

The Master Prints - This limited edition (LE) print is limited to 50 prints of this image plus ten artist proofs (AP). They are printed on 24 x 36 inch sheets.

Custom sizes of this image are available by special request.

The story behind Light

Years ago I was asked to shoot aerials of every lighthouse on the coast of Maine. I didn’t need to be asked twice on that one. 

This is Boon Island, over to the west of us, between Portland and the New Hampshire border. It stands on a ledge that’s only 300 by 700 feet, six miles from the mainland, and it’s the tallest lighthouse in New England.

Boon is a tough place alright, like most of the outer lights, but for “tough” it’s in a class unto itself. Here’s part of what Wikipedia has to say about it:

“It was discovered when a coastal trading vessel, the Increase, wrecked on it in the summer of 1682. Four survivors — three white men and one Indian — spent a month on the island, subsisting on fish and gulls' eggs. One day they saw smoke rising from Mount Agamenticus several miles away in York, so they built a fire to attract attention to their plight. The Indians at Mount Agamenticus saw the smoke from the island and the castaways were soon rescued. Seeing their survival as a boon granted by God, the men dubbed it Boon Island, an ironic name for what poet Celia Thaxter called "the forlornest place that can be imagined."

More famous was the shipwreck on December 11, 1710 of the British merchant ship, Nottingham Galley. All fourteen crewmen aboard survived the initial wreck, however two died from their injuries and another two drowned attempting to reach the mainland on an improvised raft. The remaining ten crewmen managed to stay alive despite winter conditions with no food and no firewood for twenty four days, until finally rescued. They resorted to cannibalism which gave the incident a notoriety that it retains even today. It is said that after this disaster, local fishermen began leaving barrels of provisions on Boon Island in case of future wrecks. Boon Island.

Keepers willing to live in such a desolate place were few, arriving and departing in steady succession. Only one man seemed to thrive there; William W. Williams stayed 27 years and lived past the age of 90.”

And as I sit here writing and looking at “Light” – what other title could I possibly have given this? – I think about the first four survivors, I think about that later December wreck – Dear Sweet God! – and, maybe above all, I think about how much I would love to have met William W. Williams. Now there’s a story.

The United States government is trying to sell the island. Good luck. 

And the sun just keeps rising from the eastern sea.

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