MONHEGAN FISHERMAN by James Fitzgerald
I have to say… James Fitzgerald is one of my all time favorite Monhegan artists. There are many great ones, but his style is so unique and his subject matter always so interesting. It just really makes you want to know more… the stories behind the paintings! It hasn’t always been easy to get a lot of information about James Fitzgerald, but now there is a new website that will be updated regularly. By chance do YOU own a James Fitzgerald piece? If so, please contact them so that they can make this James Fitzgerald Catalog the most current it can possibly be…
We have the James Fitzgerald book which is so interesting and full of stories… I remember the first year we stayed at the Island Inn on Monhegan Island his paintings were hanging in the dining room. I. WAS. MESMERIZED. Stunners every single one of them!
MONHEGAN FUNERAL by James Fitzgerald
Ohhhh, the stories these paintings tell! Here’s a blip about the artist from JamesFitzgerald.org – he led a fascinating life and ran into some pretty cool people along the way!
James E. Fitzgerald (1899-1971) was born in Boston, MA. By the age of four, his artistic talents were recognized, and a studio space was created for him in his parent’s attic. As a child, he would visit his grandparent’s farm in Milton, MA, where he began a lifelong love of painting horses. After serving in the U.S. Marine Corps from 1918-1919, he enrolled in the Massachusetts School of Art (1919-1923), and subsequently at the Boston Museum School (1923-24). During semester break in 1923, he shipped aboard the Elizabeth Howard out of Gloucester, MA, initially to paint and sketch, but following a violent storm that left one sailor injured, he joined the crew and learned to jump into the dories for halibut fishing off the Grand Banks. In 1925 he made his first visit to Monhegan, Maine.
In 1928, Fitzgerald sailed as an able bodied seaman on the Dorothy Luckenbach out of New York City, working his way to the West coast. Although he had intended to reach Alaska, his travels took him to Monterey, CA, where he settled, married and built a home/studio. While in Monterey, he became a part of the circle of friends who gathered at the Cannery Row marine biology laboratory of Edward ‘Doc’ Ricketts. The group included John Steinbeck, Krishnamurti, John Cage and Joseph Campbell, among others. During this time, Fitzgerald’s interest in Eastern Philosophy matured, and he brought to his art its principles, seeking to express the inner vitality or spiritual rhythm of his subjects.
Fitzgerald exhibited extensively in California during the 1930s, winning at one point first prize in the California Watercolor Society exhibition. He continued to travel east and paint on Monhegan during those years, and eventually decided to settle there in 1943. Its remoteness led to the dissolution of his marriage, and Fitzgerald, who in the 1940s had exhibited at Vose Gallery in Boston, gradually withdrew from the commercial art world.
On Monhegan, Fitzgerald became part of the year-round community, purchasing first the studio and then the house built by Rockwell Kent in the first decade of the 20th century. As a studio artist, he was seen standing for hours capturing mentally the cliffs, gulls, or fishermen as they worked, returning to his easel to paint. His images of gulls wheeling over fishermen cleaning cod on Monhegan’s Fish Beach have become iconic. In those years, a lasting friendship developed with Anne M. Hubert, who along with her husband Edgar, eventually became his executors and heirs.
For the last 25 years of his life, Fitzgerald visited Katahdin in the off-season to paint, and in the late 1960s he visited Ireland several times, where he died on the Aran Islands suddenly in April 1971. The James Fitzgerald Legacy, a part of the Monhegan Museum, represents the artist’s estate.
And hey, if you are in the position to make a donation to keep the JamesFitzgerald.org site funded, that would be much appreciated as well!
Catch you back here tomorrow!
(Photos: Monhegan Associates Facebook)



Fitzgerald is among my favorite “Monhegan artists”. His best work is brilliantly composed, solid and inventive. He also has developed a unique vision. You wouldn’t mistake his best work for anybody else.
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Hey David! Ahhhh, so many great Monhegan artists (yourself included!)… Fitzgerald’s style is all his own and I love that! The first year at the Island Inn for us was unbelievable… his art was everywhere and each piece as fabulous as the next!
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