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Thursday, January 22, 2026 |
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| Nantucket Historical Association announces 2026 featured exhibition |
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Arctic maker once known (Inuit Nunaat), model qajaq on sledge with driver, ca. 1900. Walrus ivory, seal gut, sinew, and thread, 1 1/4 x 3/4 x 7 3/8 in. New Bedford Whaling Museum, 2001.100.1865
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NANTUCKET, MA.- On view from April 20 through November 1, 2026, the Nantucket Historical Associations Whaling Museum will be the first venue to host the traveling exhibition The Wider World & Scrimshaw, organized by the New Bedford Whaling Museum with support provided by Art Bridges. Surveying carving traditions that emerged along whaling routes in the Pacific world, the exhibition will showcase over 300 objects and set scrimshawthe folk art made by whalers on the body parts of whalesin conversation with carved decorative arts and material culture made by Indigenous community members from across Oceania, the Pacific, and the Arctic.
The Nantucket Historical Association is pleased to work with our colleagues at the New Bedford Whaling Museum in order to share this exhibition and important research, said Niles Parker, Gosnell Executive Director of the NHA. By applying a wider lens to our understanding of whaling, exploration, and artistic creativity, we can better understand the cultural exchange taking place which influenced disparate societies around the world.
The Wider World & Scrimshaw foregrounds the work of Native communities across Oceania, the Pacific, and Arctic, many of whom have cosmologies related to whales, distinctive maritime traditions involving marine mammals, and vibrant carving styles. It also explores how Native communities in the Pacific world were impacted by commercial whaling ventures in the 1800s and the external pressures of colonialism and Western empire-building. Engaging in questions about identity, place, and material, The Wider World & Scrimshaw will consider the impact of exploration and whaling on the production of material culture in the Pacific world between 1700 and today.
The NHAs Whaling Museum interprets the history of 19th century American whaling, where whale-hunting voyages from New England headed to all corners of the Pacific world. The Wider World & Scrimshaw exhibition will bring non-New England perspectives into our museum and help our visitors understand the cultural interactions that resulted from this commercial activity, said Michael Harrison, NHA Chief Curator and Obed Macy Research Chair. The NHA is excited to share this significant exhibition with our visitors and to open up our interpretation of whalers scrimshaw to new and broader perspectives.
An interdisciplinary, community-driven, and collections-focused exhibition, The Wider World & Scrimshaw connects the historical and contemporary through cultural products ranging from Oceanic material culture and Arctic carvings to engraved sperm whale teeth. Several short documentaries and animated films as well as tactile displays of carving techniques and natural materials will provide additional opportunities to engage with exhibition themes that include:
Paddles, Dance Wands & Clubs
Busks, Fids & Needle Cases
Coconut Dippers & Containers
Whale Cosmologies
Totem Poles & Trade Goods
Organized in consultation with a diverse advisory board of artists, scholars, and culture bearers, The Wider World & Scrimshaw is a sweeping exhibition that will explore the rich cultural traditions, carving forms, and material exchanges that emerged in cultural contact zones across the Pacific world and which continue to shape artistic practice and communities today.
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