Painting and printmaking Gloucester's scenery, active fishing industry, and arts community have attracted and inspired painters since the early 19th century. The first Gloucester painter of note was native-born
Fitz Henry Lane, whose home still exists on the waterfront. The premier collection of his works is in the
Cape Ann Museum, which holds 40 of his paintings and 100 of his drawings. Other painters subsequently attracted to Gloucester include
William Morris Hunt,
Winslow Homer,
Childe Hassam,
John Twachtman, Frederick Mulhaupt,
Frank Duveneck,
Cecilia Beaux,
Jane Peterson, Gordon Grant, Harry DeMaine,
Emile Gruppe,
Stuart Davis,
Joseph Solman,
Mark Rothko,
Milton Avery,
Barnett Newman,
William Meyerowitz, Joan Lockhart,
Theresa Bernstein, Samuel Nigro, and
Marsden Hartley, and artists from the
Ashcan School such as
Edward Hopper,
John Sloan,
Robert Henri,
William Glackens, Emile Gruppe, Carl W. Illig, and
Maurice Prendergast. , 1873.
Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art Smith Cove is home to the Rocky Neck Art Colony, the oldest
art colony in the country. Folly Cove was the home of the
Folly Cove Designers, influential to this day in print design and technique.
Sculpture Several important sculptors have lived and worked in East Gloucester,
Annisquam, Lanesville and Folly Cove. They include George Aarons,
Anna Hyatt Huntington,
Charles Grafly,
Paul Manship and his daughter-in-law Margaret Cassidy Manship,
Walker Hancock, and George Demetrios. In addition,
Aristides Demetrios grew up in Folly Cove.
Literature •
Captains Courageous (1897) by
Rudyard Kipling was set in Gloucester, and adapted as a 1937 movie starring
Spencer Tracy. •
T. S. Eliot (1888–1965) summered at the family house near Eastern Point in his early years. This house is now owned by the TS Eliot Foundation and used as a writer's retreat. Eliot drew great inspiration from Gloucester, and his early poems were collected in a notebook purchased from Procters on Main Street, and now part of the Berg Collection at the
New York Public Library. One of his
Four Quartets is entitled
The Dry Salvages, the rocks off the N.E. coast of Gloucester. •
Charles Olson (1910–1970), a poet and teacher at
Black Mountain College in North Carolina, composed a 635-page poem known as
The Maximus Poems, which centered on Gloucester. • Gloucester is often referred to in the works of horror writer
H. P. Lovecraft. The fictional town of
Innsmouth in Lovecraft's
The Shadow Over Innsmouth is believed partially based on Cape Ann as a whole and Gloucester in particular. • The book
The Perfect Storm, which recounted a massive
storm of 1991, had figures based in the town. Scenes from the
film adaptation by the same name were filmed there. • Gloucester and its coast guard station are the center of the land action in
Michael J. Tougias' 2005 book
Ten Hours Until Dawn, recounting the loss of the pilot boat
Can Do and its crew during the
blizzard of 1978. •
Gloucesterbook,
Gloucestertide, and
Gloucestermas are three novels in the
Gloucesterman series by Gloucester novelist
Jonathan Bayliss set in Gloucester, fictionalized as "Dogtown" on "Cape Gloucester". •
Hersenschimmen (
Out of Mind), a 1984 novel by
J. Bernlef, is set in Gloucester. •
Anita Diamant has set two novels in Gloucester,
The Last Days of Dogtown and
Good Harbor.
Comics Gloucester is the birthplace of Marvel character Dane Whitman whose superhero alter ego is the
Black Knight.
Film •
Author! Author! had scenes shot on Good Harbor Beach in Gloucester. • In
The Bostonians, oceanfront scenes were filmed on rocks at Rafes Chasm Park, off Hesperus Avenue. •
Captains Courageous was set in Gloucester. •
The Gloucester 18 is a documentary film that investigates the Gloucester pregnancy pact, and was filmed entirely in Gloucester. •
The Good Son was filmed in Gloucester and other
Cape Ann communities. •
Grown Ups •
Manchester by the Sea much of which was filmed in Gloucester. •
Mermaids had scenes shot in the Magnolia area of Gloucester. •
Moonlight Mile was filmed almost entirely in Gloucester, with some shots in
Marblehead. •
The Perfect Storm was filmed and set in Gloucester. •
Polis is This: Charles Olson and the Persistence of Place is a one-hour documentary about the poet
Charles Olson which the
Boston Phoenix called "the best film about an American poet ever made." • Portions of
Stuck on You were filmed in Gloucester and in neighboring Rockport. (The rink scenes were filmed at the O'Maley School.) •
The Women was partly filmed in Annisquam. •
The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming takes place on a fictional Gloucester island but was filmed in
Mendocino, California. •
One Step Beyond Episode 19, "The Captain's Guests", takes place on "Cape Ann Road" set in Gloucester. •
Clear History takes place on an island in New England, and was filmed in Gloucester and around Cape Ann. • The miniseries
Olive Kitteridge: Though set in Maine, it was filmed in Gloucester and around Cape Ann. • The 2021 film
CODA is based and was shot in Gloucester.
Television National Geographic Channel films its reality television series
Wicked Tuna, documenting and chronicling the lives of commercial tuna fishermen, and the lucrative bluefin tuna industry, in Gloucester.
Route 66 season 2, episode 6, "Once To Every Man" (October 27, 1961) was set and filmed in Gloucester.
Bewitched season 7, episode 5, "Darrin On A Pedestal" (October 22, 1970) was set and partially filmed on Gloucester.
Spenser: For Hire, season 2, episode 1, "Widow's Walk" (October 4, 1986) was set and filmed in Gloucester.
Theater The Gloucester Stage Company stages five to eight plays each season, primarily in the summer months. Located in East Gloucester, the theatre sits at water's edge overlooking Smith's Cove. It was founded in 1979 by local arts and business leaders to encourage
playwrights and their new works.
Israel Horovitz, who founded the GSC, was also its artistic director from 1979 to 2006. Over the years, plays developed at the Gloucester Stage Company have gone on to critical acclaim, on and off
Broadway, nationally and internationally. The group draws theatre-goers from Gloucester, neighboring
North Shore districts, and the greater Boston area, as well as seasonal residents and tourists.
Architecture The city has much significant
architecture, from pre-Revolutionary houses to the hilltop 1870 City Hall, which dominates the town and harbor. It also has exotic waterfront homes now converted to museums, including
Beauport, built 1907–1934 by designer Henry Davis Sleeper in collaboration with local architect Halfdan Hanson, said to raise
eclecticism to the level of genius. In addition, it has
Hammond Castle, built 1926–1929 by inventor
John Hays Hammond, Jr., as a setting for his collection of
Roman,
medieval and
Renaissance artifacts. Gloucester was also the home of feminist writer
Judith Sargent Murray and
John Murray, the founder of the first
Universalist Church in America. Their house still exists as the
Sargent House Museum. Many museums are located in the main downtown area, such as the Cape Ann Museum, and the museum/aquarium Maritime Gloucester. ==Points of interest==