‘Stories of Maine: An Unfinished History’ available online

PORTLAND — The Portland Museum of Art is offering a “digital opening” featuring a wide array of objects and voices from its Maine Bicentennial exhibition, “Stories of Maine: An Unfinished History,” created in collaboration with the Maine Humanities Council.
Given the inclusive and interactive nature to the exhibition, the PMA is uniquely positioned to share this wealth of research, contributions and objects from throughout the state online. The museum hopes to offer a welcome sense of normalcy in abnormal times through the thoughtful and inspiring stories of the exhibition, new programs throughout the coming month, and a chance to relax and reflect.
“Stories of Maine” will be on view in the museum galleries when the museum re-opens — on a date yet to be determined — but for now, it appears in digital form at PortlandMuseum.org/MaineStories as part of the PMA’s online Art at Home suite of art, activities and stories during the closure period.
The exhibit focuses on the question “What is the story of Maine’s history and who gets to tell it?”
Beginning in summer 2019, the PMA and the Maine Humanities Council collaborated with partners and advisors throughout the state to select 20 stories about Maine’s past and present. The resulting exhibition includes objects such as an oil lamp from the Monhegan lighthouse and a 1906 Old Town canoe, as well as artworks such as David Driskell’s painting “Pine and Moon.”
To interpret these objects, 19 Mainers from a wide range of regions and backgrounds share their perspectives about how these objects reflect life in Maine. The 20th story in this exhibition is yours; through a recording studio, you can record and share your own Maine story, helping us to better understand our state.
The exhibition was originally scheduled to open in the museum’s Palladian Gallery March 28, with a free day, so that everyone could come to celebrate the opening of the show. With the PMA’s closure on March 13 due to safety concerns around the COVID-19 virus, the museum had to cancel this opening. The “Stories of Maine” online premiere will make the show accessible to audiences throughout the state, country and world, and can be a rallying moment for our community.
During the temporary closure, Mainers can’t access the museum, but also can’t access much of the state’s natural, cultural and community resources. When everything feels far away, the museum hopes these virtual exhibits brings art and culture closer to everyone, wherever they may be.

PHOTO: William Capen Jr., “Painters, Glaziers, and Brush Makers Banner,” Portland, 1841, oil on linen, 35 x 40 inches. Collections of Maine Historical Society, purchased by a coalition of Maine Museums.