Mabel Dwight: Cool Head, Warm Heart

2026

On view
Floor 3

A small wooden house stands amid large industrial silos while people walk and wait nearby.

Dan Nadel: Mabel Dwight. I was told that sixty or seventy years ago, rich southerners had their summer homes on Staten Island. Some of the old houses have lived on to become ramshackle tenements or laborers boarding houses. In my lithograph, Survivor, one of these houses is seen. Their flower gardens that once sloped down to the water's edge are now traversed by trolley lines and trampled to death by giant tanks. Long enclosed passageways, high scaffolded and mysterious, stretch from one strange structure to another. Electricity, like a great unseen spider, has woven an intricate black web of lines against the sky. The lines go everywhere, from pole to pole, from tower to tower. They cross and recross the street. They enmesh the world about them. They arise as high spidery structures, all lines and no substance. A few gaunt trees raise naked arms. Only weeds thrive here now. They uproot the stones of the sidewalk. They grow high enough to look imputently in the windows of the poor old houses.


Mabel Dwight, The Survivor, Staten Island, 1929. Lithograph, 11 1/2 × 15 7/8 in. (29.2 × 40.3 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; gift of Mr. and Mrs. Michael H. Irving 78.85

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