Benjamin Russell (October 16, 1804 – March 3, 1885) was an
American artist best known for his accurate
watercolors of
whaling ships working in
New England. Born to a wealthy family in
New Bedford, Massachusetts, Russell started drawing and painting in his late 30s, after a few years spent working as a
cooper aboard a whaling ship.
Russell's depiction of
perspective and depth are stiff and flat, and his images "were appreciated more for their accurate representation than their artistic value."[1] However, most of his work is perfectly to scale, resembling control drawings, and Russell watercolours were some of the better views of the mid-19th-century American whaling industry, until photography became available in the 1850s.
Russell began making lithographs in 1848, and began teaching art in
Rhode Island, after the
American Civil War ended in 1865.
Image gallery
Detail from Whaling Voyage Round the World by Russell & Purrington, ca.1848
Detail from Whaling Voyage Round the World by Russell & Purrington, ca.1848
Wreck of the
Essex; detail from Whaling Voyage Round the World by Russell & Purrington, ca.1848
Advertisement for performance at Boston's
Amory Hall of Whaling Voyage Round the World, 1849
Further reading
Robert L. Carothers and John L. Marsh. The Whale and the Panorama. Nineteenth-Century Fiction, Vol. 26, No. 3 (Dec., 1971), pp. 319–328.
Kevin J. Avery. "Whaling Voyage Round the World": Russell and Purrington's Moving Panorama and Herman Melville's "Mighty Book." American Art Journal, Vol. 22, No. 1 (Spring, 1990), pp. 50–78.
Forbes, Allan. Whale Ships and Whaling Scenes as Portrayed by Benjamin Russell (1955)