June 27, 2018 — New Bedford Fishing Heritage Center’s latest exhibit, “Rigs, Hulls, and Wheelhouses: The Art of Bob Lavoie,” opens July 12, 6 p.m., and runs through Sept. 30.
Lavoie became acquainted with New Bedford’s working fishing boats when he began unloading vessels in high school. His time on the working docks continued while studying at Southeastern Massachusetts University (now UMass Dartmouth), where he earned degrees in graphic design and illustration. He fell in love with the aesthetics of the vessels — the colors, the machinery, the lines.
After a career spent as a graphic designer, illustrator, and art director at Hasbro in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, Lavoie felt the need to begin to paint again. He began using the brilliant colors of gouache, a thick, opaque Italian watercolor. When deciding what his subject would be, he went back to something that meant a lot to him — the working fishing vessels of New Bedford and Galilee, Rhode Island.
“I’ve tried to paint them as they are — working boats with the rust, nets, blocks and confusing jumbles of lines that make them beautiful,” Lavoie said in a news release. “These working vessels are disappearing in some ports, being displaced by pristine yachts in the slips and multi-million dollar condos on the docks where once these proud working vessels sailed out into the Atlantic to bring in cod, haddock and scallops that made New England one of the primary fisheries in the world. These paintings are a small attempt to preserve a part of our New England heritage that is fast disappearing.”