At Home With Jonathan Morse - 27 East

Arts & Living

Arts & Living / 1335780

At Home With Jonathan Morse

icon 16 Photos
An antique sextant.  DANA SHAW

An antique sextant. DANA SHAW

Photographer Jonathan Morse in his living room with his antique Deardorff camera.  DANA SHAW

Photographer Jonathan Morse in his living room with his antique Deardorff camera. DANA SHAW

The living room in Jonathan Morse's Sag Harbor home.  DANA SHAW

The living room in Jonathan Morse's Sag Harbor home. DANA SHAW

Artisans from Murano, Italy, work on one of the exterior mosaics at Dormition of the Virgin Mary Greek Orthodox Church of the Hamptons on May 16. DANA SHAW

Artisans from Murano, Italy, work on one of the exterior mosaics at Dormition of the Virgin Mary Greek Orthodox Church of the Hamptons on May 16. DANA SHAW

The kitchen. DANA SHAW

The kitchen. DANA SHAW

A collection of cameras adorn Jonathan  Morse's workspace.  DANA SHAW

A collection of cameras adorn Jonathan Morse's workspace. DANA SHAW

Jonathan Morse in his home workspace.  DANA SHAW

Jonathan Morse in his home workspace. DANA SHAW

A collection of cameras adorn Jonathan  Morse's workspace.  DANA SHAW

A collection of cameras adorn Jonathan Morse's workspace. DANA SHAW

Jonathan Morse in his home workspace.  DANA SHAW

Jonathan Morse in his home workspace. DANA SHAW

A collection of cameras adorn Jonathan Morse's workspace.  DANA SHAW

A collection of cameras adorn Jonathan Morse's workspace. DANA SHAW

The studio. DANA SHAW

The studio. DANA SHAW

The living room in Jonathan Morse's Sag Harbor home.  DANA SHAW

The living room in Jonathan Morse's Sag Harbor home. DANA SHAW

A table in the living room holds many curiosities. DANA SHAW

A table in the living room holds many curiosities. DANA SHAW

The living room in Jonathan Morse's Sag Harbor home.  DANA SHAW

The living room in Jonathan Morse's Sag Harbor home. DANA SHAW

A curio cabinet filled with different items. DANA SHAW

A curio cabinet filled with different items. DANA SHAW

The dining room holds works that will be on display at an upcoming exhibition. DANA SHAW

The dining room holds works that will be on display at an upcoming exhibition. DANA SHAW

author on May 22, 2017

Photographer Jonathan Morse doesn’t have to walk far to get to his exhibition, “Face to Face: East End Portraits,” which is on display from June 16 to July 12 at the Sag Harbor Whaling and Historical Museum. He lives right down the street, in an eight-room, Federal-style home that has not changed much since it was built in 1856.

“My house and the Whaling Museum were both built by Benjamin Huntting, prominent landowner and whale ship owner. He was married to Mary Howell, whose family put the first tryworks on whaling ships,” Mr. Morse said. “Huntting lived in the Whaling Museum, and mine was built for his daughter Eloise, who was married to Henry Cook, an English doctor.”

For the last 30 years, Mr. Morse has made the house his home. “I’m only the fourth owner of the house,” he said.

Conspicuous consumption is on view everywhere. “There’s a fireplace in every room,” Mr. Morse noted. Elaborate rosettes on the ceilings remain from the days of gaslight chandeliers. Floor-to-ceiling windows in the parlor are edged in half panes.

“I think they were a tax dodge,” Mr. Morse said of the windows. “I heard they were taxed per pane. I’m not sure if that’s true, but I hope it is.”

His own father, Earl Morse, was a noted collector of East Asian antiquities. Mr. Morse’s home is filled with some of his father’s collectibles as well as other members of his family. “These Tong figurines are original,” he said. “These are the real thing.”

A painting from the Ming dynasty, “Writing a Poem Upon a Lotus Leaf,” once hung at the Met but now dominates Mr. Morse’s living room. A smaller but no less impressive Sonia Delaunay painting from 1959 hangs on another wall, inherited from his mother, Irene Levitt Morse. His grandfather Adolph Levitt’s collection of tiny Victorian cottages are neatly displayed on shelves. “They were used to burn incense,” he said.

Mr. Levitt was a baker, who you can thank for inventing the donut machine. “The Lincoln machine, named after the great emancipator,” Mr. Morse said. Sadly, there is not one on display.

A curio cabinet is filled with “all kinds of funny stuff,” like scrimshaw and a whale’s tooth. A 1950 Deardorff 8-by-10 camera is a hint to what’s in store on the tour. “It’s what Ansel Adams used,” he said. “The type of camera used for portraits in the ’30s and ’40s. It had that soft glow.”

Growing up in Great Neck, Mr. Morse’s parents surrounded him with art and encouraged him to study art, not just as folly but as a “serious expression of civilization.” As a young boy, he raised keeshonds, thoroughbred dogs, with his brother, and practiced the clarinet, although he says he is the “world’s worst” on the instrument.

Mr. Morse attended Choate and Harvard and became an architect, at one point working out of an office at the top of the Chrysler Building.

“In my younger days, I wasted a lot of time on sailboats,” he said. He first came to Sag Harbor on the weekends on his 53-foot yacht, which he raced. “It was sort of like having an apartment in the village,” he said. “When I embarked upon my nuptial experience, I thought I needed a hair dryer to plug in.”

Although the yacht is gone, you might catch him tooling around on his modified Triumph Street Triple R motorcycle.

Entering his office is nothing short of astounding: Rows and rows of vintage cameras line every wall. “Two hundred, but who’s counting?” he said. “I’ve got all kinds of great cameras. Here are all the Leicas M3, M4, M5 and M6, which you have probably never seen.” A few mementos are interspersed, like the top of a Roman amphora he found at the bottom of the sea while scuba diving in Bari, Italy.

All the magic happens in the adjoining room. His studio is simple. A large, old Swedish studio stand, a stool, a black, gray and white backdrop, and a single strobe light replicates traditional north window light.

Mr. Morse shot an earlier portrait series, “In His Own Light,” on location at the artists’ studios. “The location aspect was a bit of distraction for the character of the sitter,” Mr. Morse said. “The background is supposed to tell something about sitter but I don’t think it did.”

Then he shot a portrait of Paul Ickovic, another photographer, in his studio, and the photograph won a Guild Hall award. “Paul suggested I take nothing but portraits, because he liked his so well,” Mr. Morse said. “Paul in the studio emphasized character of sitter, which he has.”

“Every picture I took after that, the emphasis is on sitting, not on technique, not on the photographer,” he said. He used the exact same format to photograph 75 artists, all male, all of a certain age, all black and white, taken with his Sony mirrorless camera, model A7r Mark ll, 42 megapixels.

Shooting with a high-resolution camera is like looking at a person with a magnifying glass. “It’s kind of super realism,” Mr. Morse said. “These pictures of the guys derive their power in a certain sense from detail that you see. You don’t see those details in person.”

He’s talking about the details of an aging face, which may be why his sitters are all male. The photographs intensify the look of the person’s age and character and women, in Mr. Morse’s experience, were not too keen with the end result—but don’t ask him about it: “I’m sick of having to defend my grumpy old white guy pictures.”

Eric Fischl, John Alexander and Keith Sonnier are just a smattering of the local artists he shot for the “Face to Face” series. Forty portraits will be on exhibit at the museum. Peter J. Marcelle, who curated the show, is on the cover of the catalog, which contain 64 portraits and can be purchased for $20.

“I’m still shooting,” he said, bringing up his last sitter on his computer screen, artist Will Ryan. “He looks menacing. He didn’t like it.”

The finished works of art were printed by Jonathan, at his home. “The reason it looks like a print shop, is because it is a print shop.” The printer is the size of a grand piano.

There’s no glare and no frame, just a thin plastic sheet on the back, and vinyl laminate on the front. “I invented this,” he said, pointing to a propped up photo of Craig Page, who happened to pop in a few minutes later. The photo dwarfed the person.

He also invented a way to sign his artwork, including his catalog. See for yourself: He’ll be signing it at Sylvester & Co.,103 Main Street Sag Harbor on Sunday, May 28, from 5 to 7 p.m., and he may have a few of his friends on hand. They’ll meet again at the Sag Harbor Whaling Museum on July 1, from 6 to 8 p.m.

You May Also Like:

Guild Hall Announces Its 2025 Museum Schedule

Guild Hall’s 2025 exhibition schedule opens on Sunday, May 4, with a dynamic group exhibition, ... 11 Feb 2025 by Staff Writer

From Nat King Cole to Michael Bublé: Valentine’s Weekend Brings Classic Love to The Suffolk

Love is in the air at The Suffolk leading up to Valentine’s Day, with tribute ... by Leah Chiappino

'Black History On Screen': Revisiting the Impact of the Negro Baseball League

Black History Month is not just a time to honor those who fought for the ... 10 Feb 2025 by Jon Winkler

A Spanish-Language Adaptation of 17th Century Play ‘Fuenteovejuna’ Comes to the East End

OLA of Eastern Long Island (Organización Latino Americana) and Guild Hall in East Hampton are ... by Staff Writer

Bay Street Theater Announces the 2025 Summer Mainstage Season

Bay Street Theater has announced the entirety of its 2025 Summer Mainstage Season. Bringing stories ... by Staff Writer

Hamptons JazzFest Winter Jazz Series 2025: Journey Into the Art of Listening With Mary Edwards

In officially opening the Hamptons JazzFest’s winter season, composer and environmental sound artist Mary Edwards ... by Dan Ouellette

Jackie 'The Joke Man' Martling Returns to The Suffolk

Former head writer for the Howard Stern Show, Jackie “The Joke Man” Martling returns to The Suffolk on Saturday, March 1, at 8 p.m. Opening set will be performed by Long Island comedian Joe Crovella. For 18 years Martling was head writer and a cast member on radio and television’s “Howard Stern Show.” His autobiography, “The Joke Man: Bow to Stern” was released October 2017 and his podcast “Stand-Up Memories” with fellow comic Peter Bales is in its third season. In 1982, after founding Governor’s Comedy Shop in Levittown on Long Island and touring as a national headliner, on a ... 9 Feb 2025 by Staff Writer

Intermediate Weaving With Artist Toni Ross

On Tuesday, February 25, from 2 to 6 p.m., artist Toni Ross leads an Intermediate ... by Staff Writer

A Musical Trifecta at LTV Studios

LTV Studios and the East End Underground Live Concert Series will present “Winter in the Hamptons: A Musical Trifecta” on Saturday, February 22, at 7 p.m. The evening will feature local music, singing, dancing and refreshments with a line-up of East End bands including Astro-Nauto, Two 90s Kids and Whale/Heart. On stage performing as a one man band (more specifically in a band with one human and several robots) with a guitar, analog synth and a ton of pedals setup or in the studio recording most of the instruments himself, John T. Velsor created the group Astro-Nauto as an inventive ... 8 Feb 2025 by Staff Writer

'Charity Starts at Home Nadine Ruff'

From the mind of choreographer, dancer, and mixed media artist Arien Wilkerson (Tnmot Aztro) comes ... by Staff Writer