Brothers, South Boston Beach

Skip to main content
© Marla Sweeney. Image courtesy of Light Work, Syracuse, NY. For educational purposes only.
Brothers, South Boston Beach
© Marla Sweeney. Image courtesy of Light Work, Syracuse, NY. For educational purposes only.
Artist/Maker (American, born 1968)
Date2003
MediumArchival inkjet print
DimensionsImage: 9 × 9 in. (22.9 × 22.9 cm) Sheet: 14 11/16 in. × 11 in. (37.3 × 27.9 cm)
Credit LinePurchase, The Wynant J. Williams '35 Art Collection Fund
Object number2020.8.22
Not on view
Description"Although Marla Sweeney hails from Lowell, MA, the people she photographs on the beaches there are strangers. This makes the tangible connection between photographer and subject, so evident in Sweeney’s Salisbury images, all the more remarkable. 'Sweeney’s beach portraits feel like truth to me. Their subjects are not the self-conscious toned beauties of such places as South Beach or Santa Monica. Sweeney shoots the old, the poor, and the imperfect, yet despite the vulnerability of the half-dressed before the gaze of a stranger, they have dignity, strength, and self-possession. An image of an old woman in a voluminous flowered bathing suit and rubber cap shows veined thighs and sagging skin, but she faces the camera with comfort and confidence. We feel that she has come to the ocean often, that she is happy by the sea, and even that she has grown wise there. Another image shows a mother and son, both sheltered under a huge umbrella, the son sheltered additionally by his mother’s protective embrace around his narrow shoulders. We also see the emphasis on relationships in a photograph of two young boys. We know they are brothers by the title, but we would intuit it from their resemblance and their easy, mirroring stances. They are not conventionally appealing children. Their pale skin and hollow rib-revealing torsos suggest some level of deprivation, but they are happy and safe at the beach with their cups of slush and each other. Sweeney’s image of a freckled, almost adolescent boy wrapped in a striped towel is as sweet as “Boy Elvis.” Like her other subjects, the boy is willing to be photographed. He participates in the picture making with his solid stance and his red, white, and blue presence, echoed by a glimpse of an American flag flying above the otherwise fog gray environment.' — Alison Nordstrom, 2008 Light Work Annual Marla Sweeney lives and works in New Hampshire. Sweeney’s work has been exhibited widely, and is included in permanent collections, including the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; Musee da la Photographie, Charleroi, Belgium; and the Harry Ransom Center Collection, University of Texas, Austin. She participated in Light Work’s Artist-in-Residence Program in May 2007." (SOURCE: Light Work, Syracuse, NY)

Additional Details

Provenance 2020: Hamilton College (Ruth and Elmer Wellin Museum of Art), by purchase from Light Work, Syracuse, NY.
Markings Marks: "EPSON; Epson / Professional Paper" on verso printed repeatedly across sheet.
Signature Signed "Marla Sweeney" on verso at lower right in ink.
Inscribed "Brothers - South Boston Beach, 2004" on verso at lower left in ink.
© Garie Waltzer. Image courtesy of Light Work, Syracuse, NY. For educational purposes only.
Garie Waltzer
Date: 2005
Medium: Piezography print
Object number: 2020.8.12
© Jeffrey Gibson. Image courtesy of the Ruth and Elmer Museum of Art at Hamilton College, Clint…
Jeffrey Gibson
Date: 2018
Medium: Single-channel video
Object number: 2018.6
Photograph by John Bentham.
Elizabeth Catlett
Date: 1992
Medium: Screenprint
Object number: 2017.1
© Angelika Rinnhofer. Image courtesy of Light Work, Syracuse, NY. For educational purposes only…
Angelika Rinnhofer
Date: 2005
Medium: Archival inkjet print
Object number: 2020.8.3
© Jamea Richmond-Edwards. Image Courtesy of Art+Culture Projects, Brooklyn, NY. For educational…
Jamea Richmond-Edwards
Date: 2018
Medium: Pigment print with silkscreen diamond dust and gold foil
Object number: 2020.1
Photograph by David Revette
Richard Tuttle
Date: 2002
Medium: Acrylic, fir plywood, cardboard and modeling paste
Object number: 2015.7
Photograph by John Bentham.
Unknown artist
Date: probably first half of 19th century
Medium: Gouache and gold over white ground on paper
Object number: 1986.26
© Lorna Simpson. Image courtesy of the Ruth and Elmer Wellin Museum of Art, Clinton, NY. Photog…
Lorna Simpson
Date: 1996
Medium: Portfolio of 21 photogravures with text
Object number: 2016.11
Photograph by John Bentham.
Renée Stout
Date: 2008-10
Medium: Acrylic, latex paint, spray paint, plastic rhinestones, wood, glass, metal, varnish, collage, and found objects
Object number: 2016.2
Image courtesy of the Ruth and Elmer Wellin Museum of Art at Hamilton College, Clinton, NY. Pho…
Firelei Báez
Date: 2013
Medium: Pigmented abaca, cotton, and linen on abaca base sheet with radiograph opaque ink
Object number: 2016.7
A Tammany Rat, from "Harper's Weekly"
Thomas Nast
Date: published November 7, 1874
Medium: Wood engraving on newsprint
Object number: 2019.13.259
Photograph by David Revette.
Carrie Mae Weems
Date: 1990 (printed 2010)
Medium: Gelatin silver print
Object number: 2011.5