Mabel Dwight: Cool Head, Warm Heart

2026

On view
Floor 3

A crowd of people, including children, watches large orange fish through a glass aquarium.

Dan Nadel: Mabel Dwight. The goldfish tank is very popular. Perhaps people feel closer to goldfish from small scale association. Until I saw this tank, I didn't know these fish ever grew so large. I suppose they were created especially for parlor sized glass globes. 

When I made the lithograph called Aquarium, I got a bird's-eyed view of the alligators and seals from the upper balcony. The people that straggle about the floor and hang over the rails give both gay and somber color to the place. The drifters from the bench come in to get warm in the winter and to escape the sun in the summer and to kill time of which they have so much. They're always there. They stand in the shadows under the balcony and look at the fish and the small tanks that circle about the walls. They look at the fish and the fish look at them idly, vaguely. Then they drift off into the shadows of their separate worlds.

One day, I saw a huge grouper fish and a fat man trying to outstare each other. It was a psychological moment. The fish's mouth was open and his telescopic eyes focused intently. The man, startled by the sudden apparition, hid his hat behind him and dropped his jaw also. They hypnotized each other for a moment, then both swam away. Queer fish. We may be distantly related biologically. There's not much kinship in the feeling.


Mabel Dwight, Aquarium, 1928. Color lithograph, 11 5/8 × 16in. (29.5 × 40.6 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Gift of Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney 31.718

0:00

0:00


On the Hour

A 30-second online art project:
Frank WANG Yefeng, The Levitating Perils #2

Learn more about this project

Learn more at whitney.org/artport

On the Hour projects can contain motion and sound. To respect your accessibility settings autoplay is disabled.