Triumphant Grace: Important Americana from the Collection of Barbara and Arun Singh

Triumphant Grace: Important Americana from the Collection of Barbara and Arun Singh

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 1045. RALPH E. CAHOON, JR. | SUMMER VISITORS AT HYANNISPORT (PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY AND FAMILY).

RALPH E. CAHOON, JR. | SUMMER VISITORS AT HYANNISPORT (PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY AND FAMILY)

Auction Closed

January 25, 06:44 PM GMT

Estimate

30,000 - 50,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

RALPH E. CAHOON, JR.

(1910-1982)

SUMMER VISITORS AT HYANNISPORT (PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY AND FAMILY)


oil on board

circa 1961

15 ½ by 22 in.

signed R. CAHOON lower right

Commissioned by the Boston Globe, April 1962;

Northeast Auctions, Hampton, New Hampshire, New Hampshire Auction, August 7-8, 1993, lot 825.

When a young John F. Kennedy was elected President of the United States in 1960 and images of his charming family vacationing at the Kennedy Compound in Hyannis Port proliferated through media coverage, the allure and appeal of Cape Cod and its activities proportionately increased and the popularity of local artists, Ralph and Mary Cahoon, soared. In August 1961, first lady Jacqueline Kennedy visited the Cahoons’ studio with her sister-in-law, Jean Kennedy Smith. Both Jackie and Jean purchased two of Ralph’s paintings each. A great admirer of the Kennedys and inspired by the visit, Ralph shortly thereafter made the Kennedys the implied subject of Summer Visitors at Hyannisport. The dark-haired father, widely accepted to represent John F. Kennedy, dozes off while reading an issue of the Washington Post with a string tied around his big toe symbolizing his marriage to Jackie as she, portrayed as a mermaid, gazes at him adoringly, wearing more than the usual number of pearl necklaces – a clever ploy for insinuating wealth as well as modesty. John-John and Caroline, represented by the mer-boy and girl that play in the water, are depicted tugging a toy model of the PT-109 boat that his father commanded during World-War II and she with doll and bucket in hand. The family’s yacht flying the American flag is seen moored in the background. In April of 1962, the Boston Globe purchased this painting directly from the artist.