More than meets the eye
Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- When Marcus DeChevrieux, the curator at the Newport
Harbor Nautical Museum, starts talking about his job, his work sounds a
lot like that of a detective.
The Corona del Mar resident, whose passion for sailing and maritime
history has continued to grow ever since childhood, said that by looking
at 18th and 19th century ship paintings, he’s able to find out more than
is obvious to the untrained eye.
Reading the ship’s flags, DeChevrieux figures out the vessel’s name.
With that information, he can trace the ship to the yard where it was
built and discover its creators as well as its sailors as a result.
“Solving the small mysteries that are hidden in period maritime
paintings -- that fascinates me,” he said Thursday.
DeChevrieux, who said he’s a self-taught specialist on these
paintings, divides his time between the museum and The Kelton Foundation
in Los Angeles, which includes one of the largest private maritime
collections in the country.
“The idea was for me to marry a museum without a collection to a
collection without a museum,” he said as others were putting the
finishing touches on the museum’s latest exhibition in the grand salon,
which opened Thursday night.
Titled “Catalina and the Channel Islands -- Newport’s offshore
neighbors,” the show documents the islands’ nautical history, beginning
with prehistoric planked canoes to the pleasure yachts of today.
DeChevrieux, who has been with the museum for the past two years,
usually picks themes for the exhibits based on artifacts he knows he can
get, he said.
The Catalina exhibition came to him via the museum’s exhibit
committee, leaving him with the challenge to dig up paintings, models and
maps to fill the showcases.
“I pretty much had to start from scratch,” he said.
But one collector led to another and in the end, DeChevrieux brought
together objects from 60 different lenders for the exhibition.
And while drawing people’s attention to the more or less unknown
Channel Islands was partly his goal, he said that he hoped the island’s
pristine nature would not succumb to a influx of tourists as a result of
the show.
“I wanted to tell people the story and not tell them where it is,” he
said, laughing.
Although DeChevrieux doesn’t own a sailing boat himself, he said he’s
passionate about schooners.
Why?
“They’re antique rigs -- but that’s a whole other story,” he said,
before returning to the grand salon to get things ready for opening
night.
FYI
The exhibition continues until June 30. The museum is open Tuesday
through Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and is located on the Riverboat
“Pride of Newport” at 151 East Coast Highway. Information: (949)
673-7863.
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