A black and white photograph of Barbara Boyland of Bath, painting a large Canada Goose decoy. She is sat at a table in her kitchen holding the paintbrush to the decoy's head.
The photo was published in The Times Record in Brunswick, Maine, on 02/10/1986.
Name/Title
Barbara Boyland Painting a Decoy
Entry/Object ID
2003.546.3.955
Description
A black and white photograph of Barbara Boyland of Bath, painting a large Canada Goose decoy. She is sat at a table in her kitchen holding the paintbrush to the decoy's head.
The photo was published in The Times Record in Brunswick, Maine, on 02/10/1986.
Collection
Times Record
Lexicon
Nomenclature 4.0
Nomenclature Secondary Object Term
Print, Photographic
Nomenclature Primary Object Term
Photograph
Nomenclature Sub-Class
Graphic Documents
Nomenclature Class
Documentary Objects
Nomenclature Category
Category 08: Communication Objects
Search Terms
Times Record
Exhibitions
Exhibition
Labor of Love: Creating Art and Community
Notes
Decoys, specifically duck decoys, were originally used as a hunting tool by Indigenous Americans. Colonists in the 18th and 19th centuries picked up the tactic. Now decoys are not used for hunting so much as a folk art pastime. Barbara Boyland (1935-) of Bath, ME, is seen painting a large Canada Goose decoy in this photo. Boyland continues to paint decoys in remembrance of her late husband and his love of hunting, staying connected to him through the process despite his passing.