Diantha was born in Fairfield, Maine,
in 1809, and married Washington Gordon, also of Fairfield, in
1828. After an image of the
painting appeared in the antiques journal, Maine Antique Digest,
in 1981, Diantha Gordon’s great-granddaughter contacted Nina
and told her something of her family’s history. Apparently
Diantha and her husband were so disagreeable that their granddaughter
(Nina’s contact’s mother) once locked the two in an
outhouse where they were not discovered until evening. The
painting of Diantha was completed in 1832. Its style is the
type that most delights lovers of folk art, for the flatness of
the painting and the displaced ear seem to foreshadow the bold
geometric patterns found in modern art of the early twentieth century.
Chosen by the Littles
to embody their idealized vision of rural New England, these
objects and others at Cogswell’s Grant
suggest a myth about New England that still prevails. The
combination of worn surfaces and rich earth tones, and the juxtaposition
of naïve portraits with colorful hand-worked floor coverings
evoke a sense of a comfortable pre-industrial life. That
such a life never existed makes it no less important. The
Littles’ collection evokes a golden age, a world that was
sweeter and simpler, that remains just out of reach.
Carlisle, Nancy. Cherished
Possessions, A New England Legacy. Boston:
Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities (SPNEA),
2003.
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