Monday, March 4, 2013

Railroad Museum Visitors are in for a Visual Treat With Debut of “Sweet Stop: Mike Kotowski’s Sugar Cane Trains of Hawaii” Exhibit - March 12


Sacramento, California – Visitors to the California State Railroad Museum are in for a visual treat when a new exhibit titled “Sweet Stop: Mike Kotowski’s Sugar Cane Trains of Hawaii” debuts on March 12, 2013.  The new exhibit will showcase a collection of 11 original paintings that capture the heyday of Hawaii’s sugar plantation railroads. Inspired by historic photographs, noted railroad artist Michael F. Kotowski created this series of paintings between 1976 and 1978 for a calendar commemorating the 100th anniversary of the introduction of steam-powered locomotives to sugar cane plantations of the Hawaiian Islands.

As background, sugar cane plantations could not have prospered without the technology of steam-driven locomotives which helped Hawaii evolve from an Island Kingdom to the nation's 50th state.  In fact, from the middle of the 19th century until the late 1940s, small railroads -- mostly narrow gauge -- linked the plantations and mills to the ships that transported sugar from the islands to markets in the continental United States. Hence, the sugar industry grew rapidly and became the dominant industry of the Hawaiian Islands.

Once on display, “Sweet Stop: Mike Kotowski’s Sugar Cane Trains of Hawaii” exhibit will continue through August 25, 2013.  For more information about this exhibit or other events and activities offered by the California State Railroad Museum, please  call  916-445-6645 or
visit www.californiastaterailroadmuseum.org.

No comments:

Post a Comment