Young America: Roy Lichtenstein and the America’s Cup
May 26–August 13, 2017

For immediate release: 4/20/17
For further information contact: Douglas Perkins, Operations Manager, at deperkin@middlebury.edu or (802) 443-5235

Middlebury, VT—In 1994, PACT 95, a syndicate organized to compete in the America’s Cup trials the following year, invited Pop artist Roy Lichtenstein (1923–1997) to create a graphic design for the hull and spinnaker of their boat. The syndicate, which included as skipper, Kevin Mahaney, a 1984 graduate of Middlebury College and the winner of a silver medal in sailing at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, is responsible for the implementation of one of Lichtenstein’s largest and last works. On Friday, May 26 the Middlebury College Museum of Art opens the exhibition Young America: Roy Lichtenstein and the America’s Cup. The exhibit, which will remain on view through August 13, includes the actual seventy-seven foot hull of Young America—on loan to Middlebury from Storm King Art Center in Mountainville, NY—which is displayed above the pond adjacent to the Museum. Featured in the exhibit are Lichtenstein’s original drawing for the project, from a private collection, and four important preliminary works by the artist: the maquettes for the hull and spinnaker, as well as two schematic drawings, all of which are on loan from the Osaka City Museum of Modern Art, Japan.

The exhibit recounts the history of the Lichtenstein commission and places it within the context of the America’s Cup races before and since. The first America’s Cup was awarded by Great Britain’s Royal Yacht Squadron in 1851 to the schooner yacht “America” after a race around the Isle of Wight. From 1851 until 1983, the United States bested every challenger and the silver ewer, affectionately known as the “Auld Mug,” presented to the victor remained in the possession of the New York Yacht Club. But since the original match there have been 33 challenges and the cup has at various times been held by Australia, New Zealand, and Switzerland. On May 26, 2017—the day the Middlebury exhibit opens—the trials to select this year’s challenger will be held in Bermuda. Three weeks later, on June 17th, the 35th America’s Cup Match will begin with the champion being the first boat to win seven races.

Lichtenstein’s graphic design, which covers the entire length of the hull, is comprised of a golden-haired mermaid gliding through the sea. In selecting this image, the artist utilized a motif that has been a popular element of vessels for centuries. Prior to the modern era sailing vessels often featured a figurehead that represented various gods, national symbols, people of prominence, and mythical creatures, such as the mermaid. These choices were intended to protect the vessel and bring it good luck. Lichtenstein developed a design that consciously placed the mermaid’s head and torso where it recalls the figureheads of an earlier era. To complement the hull decoration, Lichtenstein designed a spinnaker emblazoned with bright rays of sunlight showering down on the boat.

Young America is known as an International America’s Cup Class (IACC) vessel that was developed as a successor to the twelve metre yachts sailed in Cup races from 1958–1987. The IACC boats, which could be up to eighty-two feet long, weigh up to twenty-four tons and have a mast 115 feet tall, were sailed in America’s Cup races from 1992–2007, after which the design rules were changed again to enhance experimentation and competition.

Additional prints, photographs, and paintings in the exhibit, such as Fitz Henry Lane’s Yacht ‘Northern Light’ in Boston Harbor (1845), on loan from Shelburne Museum, examine the history of yacht racing in America from the years immediately prior to 1851. While the evolution of yacht design and choice of materials have played an instrumental role in determining subsequent America’s Cup victors, these factors have accelerated in recent years and today’s yachts bear little resemblance to their classic predecessors such as Young America.

Two flat screens in the exhibit will provide complementary film history of Young America and stream this year’s America’s Cup trials and the cup races themselves.

A 360-degree video of the installation of the hull at Middlebury is available at

. 360 video is still a relatively new technology which is most reliably viewed with either Google’s Chrome browser or Firefox. Once you hit play you have the ability, if watching on a laptop or desktop, to click and drag around within the video to explore the entire 360 sphere. If watching on a tablet or smart phone the experience is controlled by the user as s/he moves the phone/tablet in space to dictate the field of view.

Press Images


Roy Lichtenstein, Mermaid
Roy Lichtenstein, Mermaid, 1994, painted carbon fiber and epoxy over aluminum honeycomb core, 8 x 77 x 14 feet. Major funding provided by: Ford Motor Company Fund, the Ralph E. Ogden Foundation, The Young America Foundation; additional generous support provided by: Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Bass, Mr. C. Thomas Clagett, Jr., The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Gosnell, Mr. Bernard H. Gustin, The Charlotte and Walter Kohler Charitable Trust, Ann & John Marshall, Margaret T. Morris Foundation, Mr. and Mrs. James X. Mullen, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Stark, Mr. Robert G. Stone, Jr., and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Weg
Roy Lichtenstein, Mermaid Sailboat Hull maquette
Roy Lichtenstein, Mermaid Sailboat Hull (Maquette), 1994, acrylic painted fiberglass wood, 100 x 15 x 8 inches (254 x 44.5 x 20.3 cm), built by model makers. © Estate of Roy Lichtenstein.
Roy Lichtenstein, Mermaid Sailboat Spinnaker Maquette
Roy Lichtenstein, Mermaid Sailboat Spinnaker (Maquette), 1994, fabric, 120 x 72 x 23 inches (304.8 x 182.9 x 58.4 cm). © Estate of Roy Lichtenstein.
Roy Lichtenstein, study for Mermaid Sailboat
Roy Lichtenstein, Mermaid Sailboat (Study), 1994, graphite pencil and colored pencil on vellum, 13 x 26 inches (irregular). Private collection. © Estate of Roy Lichtenstein.
Fitz Henry Lane, Yacht Northern Light in Boston Harbor
Fitz Henry Lane (1804–1865), Yacht ‘Northern Light’ in Boston Harbor, 1845, oil on canvas. Collection of Shelburne Museum, museum purchase, acquired from Maxim Karolik, 1959–265.59.
Currier and Ives, Sloop Yachts Mischief and Atalanta
Currier & Ives, Sloop Yachts Mischief and Atalanta in The Race for “The America’s Cup” at New York, Nov. 9th & 10th, 1881, c. 1881, oil color lithograph, 19 1/4 x 27 7/8 inches. Collection of Middlebury College Museum of Art. Purchase with funds provided by the Electra Havemeyer Webb Art Acquisition Fund.
Kevin Mahaney at the helm of Young America
Kevin Mahaney at the helm of Young America during the America’s Cup trials in 1995. Courtesy of Getty Images.
Kevin Mahaney at the helm of Young America
Kevin Mahaney at the helm of Young America during the America’s Cup trials in 1995
Roy Lichtenstein at work on the design for Young America
Roy Lichtenstein at work on the design for Young America
Roy Lichtenstein at work on the design for Young America
Roy Lichtenstein at work on the design for Young America
Kevin Mahaney at the helm of Young America
Young America competing in the America’s Cup trials in 1995. Courtesy of Getty Images.

The Middlebury College Museum of Art, located in the Mahaney Center for the Arts on Rte. 30 on the southern edge of campus, is free and open to the public Tues. through Fri. from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sat. and Sun. from noon to 5 p.m. It is closed Mondays. The museum is physically accessible. Parking is available in the Mahaney Center for the Arts parking lot. For further information and to confirm dates and times of scheduled events, please call (802) 443–5007 or TTY (802) 443–3155, or visit the museum’s website at museum.middlebury.edu.