The Matter of Memory

The Matter of Memory

The Matter of Memory. The role of museums as the custodians of individual and collective memory. The image features mementos, mourning jewelry, souvenirs, and other physical objects used in commemoration.

April 1- November 3, 2024

The role of museums as both guardians and creators of individual and community memory

Programs, Events, & Lectures

Events are being added all the time! Please check back in for updates.

 

Exhibition Programs

Connect with Portsmouth and our local community through the collection or workshops, lectures, and community conversations we have planned this season.

There are no upcoming events at this time.

Exhibition open seven days

10:00am–5:00pm

Museums, by their very nature as repositories and preservers of collections of objects, are vessels of individual and community memory. These same museums, consciously and unconsciously, are active participants in shaping our understanding of history.

What histories do we choose to examine and to share, both as a museum and as a community? Whose stories do we establish, legitimize, and perpetuate through the things we save and display? Can our collective memories bind us together or can our interpretation of history be manipulated to distort the past and keep us apart?

This exhibition encourages visitors to look at how the items we preserve are tools for shaping how we remember the past.

IN MEMORIAM

It is a basic part of the human experience to honor and remember “the unfortunate dead” through customs, rituals, and practices that have evolved constantly over time. While the rituals and traditions surrounding death and mourning may have changed over the past few centuries, the motivations behind these historical customs remain familiar: to keep those we’ve lost present in our lives and memories.

Mourning hair wreath, ca. 1880-1900. Portsmouth area (Downs family)

Molly’s Table- Molly’s Table, one of the few possessions of an enslaved person to survive to the present day.

WHOSE PAST?

The collection of the Historical Society, gathered largely through gifts over the past century, consists primarily of domestic goods representing Portsmouth’s dominant white families of Anglo-American descent. Like most cities and towns, however, Portsmouth has been and continues to be home to many communities who often have been overlooked or undervalued—Native Americans, African Americans, the LGBTQ+ community, immigrants from central and southern Europe and elsewhere, and many others.

MEMENTOS AND RELICS

Since ancient Rome, the gathering of souvenirs has been a significant part of a traveler’s experience. Derived from the Latin subvenire (“occur to the mind”) and the French (“remember”), souvenirs provide a tangible means after one has returned home of recalling journeys and trips and reliving them (perhaps with pleasure) in the mind.

Blue and purple Phoenician Damascus tile. Purchased in Damascus in 1872, J. N. Coffindayen.

Blue enamel watch on a gold chain encircled with pearls. Purchased by Woodbury Langdon in 1775.

ICONS OF CONTINUITY

Objects passed down from generation to generation are known to some sociologists as “icons of continuity,” or more commonly, as heirlooms. How these items preserve and conjure up family memories is independent of the nature of the object itself. An everyday, humble object can be as evocative of previous generations as any grand or luxurious masterpiece. The context, associations, and history of the piece count as much, or more, than the intrinsic qualities of the given object.

THE INVENTION AND MAINTENENCE OF TRADITIONS

History museums, in this country, have often sought objects associated with significant figures in American history. These objects help establish and perpetuate the memory of figures deemed to be important and, in a positive sense, contribute to a shared sense of cultural literacy. In a negative sense, they also help elevate a highly selective group of individuals, particularly “great white men.”

JPJ Memorabilia

In the upstairs gallery

Contemporary works of art by members of the New Hampshire Art Association exploring wide-ranging themes of memory and remembrance in the visual arts.

  • What histories do we choose to examine and to share?
  • What stories do we consciously or unconsciously create and perpetuate through the things we save, display, and record?
  • How is contemporary society changing our view and interpretation of the past and the role memory plays?
  • Can our collective memory bind us together or can our history be manipulated to distort the past and keep us apart?

NHAA Award Winners

This companion exhibition includes works of art that are, in diverse ways, creative contemporary responses to the themes of individual and collective memory, remembrance, the interpretation and evocation of the past, and other themes examined from an historical perspective in the first-floor exhibition.

Each of the more than fifty works by forty-one artists on display is therefore, in its own way, the artist’s meditation on an aspect of memory writ large. Paintings, photographs, prints, sculpture, and other media are included, reflecting many of the various techniques in use today. They were selected by members of the Portsmouth Historical Society staff from a large body of submissions solicited from members of the New Hampshire Art Association and other regional artists.

Special thanks to the Puddledock Restaurant for providing the prize money for the top three winners.

 

Honorable Mentions

Krysten Marche

Stay

This quiet and reflective work directly confronts death and feelings of loss. There are no figures or animals depicted in the scene, but there is evidence of the daily ritual of going for walks. This painting draws you in with the nearly monochromatic palette and leaves you with a solitary and haunting feeling.

This also serves as a reminder that the prosaic, intrinsic qualities of the actual object―a dog dish, a collar, and a leash, or a hanging garment―are divorced from the power of said object to evoke memories and create threads of continuity. 

Krysten Marche, Stay. Acrylic on canvas, 2024. $1,200

From left to right; all, David Random, found antique objects, 2024

Picturing the Past $650
A Stitch in Time $650
Innings of History $650

David Random

Picturing the Past, A Stitch in Time, and Innings of History

Each of these three assemblages, in its own way, is a compartmentalized memory palace devoted to a single subject, including baseball, hand sewing, and photography.  As such, each evokes and encapsulates memories of people, products, processes, and activities in miniature.

These pieces highlight the fascination inspired by the past and remind us that memories and art can be lighthearted and whimsical.

davidrandom.com
david.random

Thomas Berger

Early Riches

This bold, beautifully carved image of a codfish depicts a key staple of the local Seacoast economy for much of the colonial period. Today, overfishing has had a deleterious effect on the cod population, reducing it dramatically in quantity and threatening its existence in some waters. Mounted on a box labeled for molasses, the work also relates to the section of the downstairs exhibition devoted to looking at objects with a different perspective and remembering often overlooked aspects of their being, in this case the production of sugar through the work of enslaved people in the West Indies and elsewhere. 

Thomas Berger, Early Riches. Granite, gold leaf, black stone inlay on wood, 2024.  $5,200.

www.thomasbergersculpture.com
thomasbergerdesign

Jillian Vaccaro

Sweet Dreams

Making use of the artist’s childhood bedding and said to be autobiographical in nature, this dramatic work is a veritable rending of garments of Biblical proportions, opening up avenues of interpretation and memory that often revolve around personal issues of loss and mourning, as well as growth and experience.

Jillian Vaccaro,  Sweet Dreams. My childhood bedding, acrylic, pastel, and marker on canvas, 2022. $6,850

www.jillianvaccaro.com
jillianvaccaroartist

Third Place

Maya Michaud

Truthful Reminiscense

This compelling portrait is of a young woman, hand to her cheek, apparently lost in thought. Upon close examination, its composition includes fragments of newsprint and the written word, underscoring the significance of documents in creating and sustaining memories writ large, whether truthful (as suggested here) or not.

Maya Michaud, Truthful Reminiscense. Acrylic and mixed media on paper, 2022. $645

maya.rose.art

Second Place

Diane St. Jean, Wedding Day, 1924. Linocut on Rives BFK printmaking paper, 2022. $300

dianes.printery

Diane St. Jean

Wedding Day, 1924

So many families that immigrated to the US in recent generations have little besides photographs to remember their ancestors. Diane St. Jean’s linocuts are a celebration of those treasured, tiny, black-and-white photographs, evoking, with their symbols and patterns, a wealth of history and stories on a single page.

Based on a family photograph, this strong linocut portrait of a young woman (the artist’s grandmother) depicts a stylishly dressed woman of the 1920s on her wedding day, with a fashionable cloche hat, bobbed hairstyle, and substantial bouquet of flowers. In addition to this straightforward portrait, the woman is encircled by floating babies, orbs, maybe even peacock feathers, and other enigmatic imagery that may reflect the woman’s past or future.

First Place

Rhonda Besaw

The Strength of the Nation Lies with the Women—we remember

Using traditional materials and techniques in a contemporary manner, the artist created here a stunning work that also carries a modern, timely, message. In addition, it reminds us that, as noted in the downstairs exhibition, the art and culture of the Native Americans of New England are often overlooked in local history while also demonstrating that Native Americans are very much still with us.

Rhonda Besaw, The Strength of the Nation Lies with the Women —we remember.Glass beads, wool, 2023.  $950

www.rhondabesaw.com

Thank you to our generous sponsors

Green background with text reading Rosamund Thaxter Foundation

Downtown Scavenger Hunt 2023

Downtown Scavenger Hunt 2023

Aster House

142 Fleet Street

19 Market Street

123 Congress Street

Celtic Crossing

49 Pleasant St

Celtic Crossing

13 Market Street

Celtic Crossing

89 Market Street

8 Congress Street

Richardson's Market

148 State Street

River Run Bookstore

32 Daniel Street

51 Ceres Street

100 Market Street

Celtic Crossing

112 Congress Street

40 Bridge Street

Flatbread Co

138 Congress Street

29 Congress Street

41 Market Street

NH Made

22 Deer Street
Suite 100

175 Market Street

Ten Thousand Villages

15 Vaughan Mall

2 Market Square

Thank You to our Sweet Sponsors!

Downtown Scavenger Hunt 2023

General Registration

33rd Annual Gingerbread House Contest and Exhibition in-gallery display registration

Contest Rules

  • Maximum base size is 15” by 15”. You may NOT attach multiple bases together.
  • Entries larger than 15” by 15” will not be accepted.
  • Edible materials ONLY! This includes the “glue” that holds pieces together and support on the inside! Exception: you can include string lights or fairy lights, but they MUST be plug-in. No batteries!
  • Base must be sturdy! Your house will be picked up and moved multiple times during gallery set-up.
  • Entrants will be asked to give their entry a title on drop-off.
  • By entering the contest, entrants authorize Portsmouth Historical Society to use their images and images of completed work in promotional materials.
  • Houses must be dropped off at the Portsmouth Historical Society (10 Middle Street, Portsmouth, NH) during the following times:
    • Saturday, November 18, between 12:00 pm and 5:00 pm
    • Sunday, November 19, between 12:00 pm and 5:00 pm
    • Monday, November 20, between 10:00 am and 7:00 pm
Downtown Scavenger Hunt 2023

33rd Annual Gingerbread House Contest and Exhibition

It’s the sweetest time of the year!

To celebrate over 400 years of Portsmouth’s history, the gingerbread committee at Portsmouth Historical Society has chosen the theme of “Portsmouth Past, Present and Future.” Join us at Portsmouth Historical Society from November 24 through December 30 to enjoy our 33rd Annual Gingerbread House Contest and Exhibition.

Exhibition on display Nov. 24–Dec. 30, 2023, 10:00 am–5:00 pm

Open until 7:00 pm on Fridays in December

Free for all!

Programs & Prizes

Plate of decorated holiday cookies with a large white snow flake cookie on top.
Gingerbread Smash event featuring the most adorable gingerbread man wearing safety goggles and holding a sledgehammer.

Community Judges’ Awards

It’s always such a difficult job to judge the Gingerbread Contest. Let’s give our judges a round of applause for their hard work!

First prize winner and her ribbon

Adult Category

The winner is Lauren Burdett’s HMS Hospitality Line, showcasing the red phone box that was gifted to Portsmouth, NH from Portsmouth, England in 1984

Our adult category featured so many iconic Portsmouth landmarks and creative constructions that we were once again blown away!

Honorable mention goes to Lindsay Carroll’s Our Lovely Port

Multi-Generational Category

This category brings together families and friends of all ages to work on a gingerbread entry. This year’s entries were so incredible that the judges were tied for the Honorable Mention!

Our first honorable mention goes to the Palace Family for their Goat Mountain Skiing.

The winner is Water Wheel Castle with Textile Mill by Natalie, Rachel, and Xander Little. 

The other honorable mention goes to Portsmouth Tug by the Kindstedt Family.

Teen Category

Our teen entrants combine beautiful execution with creative inspiration.

The winner is Gia Giordano’s Blue Christmas.

Honorable mention goes to Prescott Park Paradox (Before & After Climate Change) by Evy, Emma, Jillian, & Ava.

Youth Category

We’re always impressed with our youngest bakers. This year’s entries include favorite places and events in Portsmouth like Prescott Park, the Parade of Sail, and of course our John Paul Jones House!

The winner is Drew Ordman’s Tall Ships Portsmouth.

Honorable mention goes to Portsmouth Harbor Lighthouse by Lillian Carroll.

Business or Organization Category

The Little Old Cubicle in the Shoe by the International Association of Privacy Professionals’ Super Seven takes home the prize ribbon. We have it on good authority that the office also approves of this entry. 

The Monarch School gets the honorable mention for The Albacore in Action, honoring the iconic Portsmouth submarine.

Best in Show

Congratulations to Libby Giordano for her colorful Candyland at Christmas.

With so many incredible entries we have not one, but two houses taking home an honorable mention.

Marden-Abbott House & Store by Clare Dombrowski looks just like the building at Strawbery Banke.

Showcasing multiple iconic Portsmouth views Sandi Strzepek’s I ♡ Portsmouth also takes home a ribbon.

Committee’s Choice Awards

Best Historic Detail

While there were many nods to over 400 years of Portsmouth’s history in our gingerbread entries this year one monument stood above the rest. The award for Best Historic Detail goes to Rex Richards & Chloe Ingbretson-Dacey for Union is Strenght. This entry is a gingerbread representation of an arch that was erected between Market Square and Daniel Street in September, 1900 for one of Portsmouth’s many parades. The original structure was made of wood and only stood for about a month. This version is made of gingerbread and will be in the exhibition for five weeks!

Best First-Time Entry

This pair of first-time entrants chose a Portsmouth building that is near and dear to the historical society. Christmas at John’s House by Penny & Charlotte depicts the John Paul Jones House. With its cheery yellow exterior and clever pretzel windows their inspiration is immediately clear

 

People’s Choice Awards

The big winner for the People’s Choice Awards was Make-A-Wish New Hampshire’s Yuletide Palace made by Libby Giordano. This classic winter wonderland won not only People’s Choice for Best in Show, but also, Most Attention to Detail.

Libby Giordano’s Candyland at Christmas wins People’s Choice for Most Whimsical.

Best Downtown House goes to Richardson’s Market by Beth & Greg Danilowshi.

Casting a People's Choice ballot

Most Creative Use of Materials goes to Water Wheel Castle with Textile Mill by Natalie, Rachel, and Xander Little.

Gingerbread House Raffle

Win a gingerbread creation to take home as a holiday centerpiece! Raffle tickets are $1, and winners will be notified on December 19, and they may pick up the house won on Friday, December 22 between 10:00 am and 7:00 pm, or on Saturday, December 23, between 10:00 am and 5:00 pm.

A gingerbread house at the Black Dog in downtown Portsmouth

Downtown Scavenger Hunt

For the fourth year in a row, we’re partnering with downtown retailers to create a gingerbread scavenger hunt! Find all the houses, collect all your stamps, and return your entry to Portsmouth Historical Society by December 19 for a chance to win a prize! Don’t forget to vote for your favorite downtown house, too!

Gingerbread Eye-Spy

We’ll have an eye-spy activity for the younger kids. Find all the pictures and get a sticker—and a piece of candy if the parents say it’s okay!

Takeaway Craft for Kids

We’ll also have an easy craft-to-go to complete at home. Color and assemble your own gingerbread house!

Thank you to our sponsors!

Lost Neighborhoods

Lost Neighborhoods

An oil painting featuring abstract houses in various shades of reds, yellows, and oranges on a light cream background.

“Lost Neighborhoods”

November 24 – December 30
Open daily, 10am to 5pm

Free to all!

Barbara Stevens Adams, Peter Cady, Tom Glover, and Dustan Knight team up to celebrate the 400th anniversary of the founding of Portsmouth by remembering what used to be. Through their paints and brushes, these four talented artists depict the lost neighborhoods of our beloved city such as the North End, old Puddle Dock, the West End and others. Works will be on display and available for sale from November 24 through December 30 in the balcony gallery at Portsmouth Historical Society.

You’re Invited!

An oil painting featuring abstract houses in various shades of reds, yellows, and oranges on a light cream background.

Opening Reception
Sunday, November 26, 3–5 pm

An oil painting featuring abstract houses in various shades of reds, yellows, and oranges on a light cream background.

Evening Artists Chat
Friday, December 8, 5–7 pm

Barbara Adams

Barbara Stevens Adams began her art involvement while practicing as a psychotherapist in New Haven, Connecticut. Following her move to New Hampshire in 1990 she continued to pursue her art explorations which now have taker her to her current passion with oils and soft pastels. Barbara is a founding member and the past president of the Pastel Society of New Hampshire, a juried member of the New Hampshire Art Association, a Signature Member of the Pastel Painters of Maine, and a member of Kittery Art Association, Seacoast Art Association, and Newburyport Art Association. the focus of her art is frequently themes from her en plein air painting excursions, her abstract exploration, and her enjoyment of the many moods of the New England coast. Although no longer practicing in her profession as a psychotherapist, Barbara has continued to be an active supporter of community agencies. She supports, through her art, NH Public Television, Womenaid of Greater Portsmouth, Portsmouth Music and Art, and Seacoast Pathways.

Dunstan Knight

Dustan Knight is a working artist living in New Castle, a small island near Portsmouth, NH. She earned her MFA at Pratt Institute in NYC during the eighties, and an MA in Art History from Boston University. After years of teaching college and graduate art classes, she has returned full-time to her studio. As a mature artist, Dustan is able to step away from the politics of the art world and delve deeply into what matters most to her. Her art practice has exploded into powerful, abstracted images that celebrate the physicality of her materials and refer to her personal experiences in her PLACE.

Dustan Knight Fine Artist

 @dustyknightofficial

Peter Cady

Peter Cady grew up on the coast of New Hampshire. His study of painting began as a boy observing painters with their easels overlooking the ocean. He studied civil engineering but found he was drawn to things artistic and to working with his hands. After college, he worked in construction and learned fine woodworking. He still lives in the timber-framed house he built from his trees. His furniture making started to incorporate color and a variety of materials, evolving into sculpture. After a second career of teaching science to middle school students, he returned to the arts. He has gotten to know and learn from many fine painters like the ones in this group.

Peter Cady

 @pcadycreates

Tom Glover

Tom Glover was born in Keene, NH. He graduated with a BFA degree in painting at the University of New Hampshire, Durham, and worked closely with the Maine painter John Laurent up until Laurent’s death in 2005. He studied painting restoration with the conservator Anthony Moore in York, Maine. For several years he lectured at the University of Connecticut to science education graduate students on “The Landscape, Mythology, and the Artist.” He has also taught painting at the UNH Department of Continuing Education, and at workshops on the Isles of Shoals. Currently, he teaches painting at Sanctuary Arts in Eliot, Maine.

Tom Glover

 Tom Glover

 @tomgloverart

This exhibition is a part of the Portsmouth NH 400 celebrations.