An American in London: Whistler and the Thames (16 October 2013 - 12 January 2014) opens today at the Dulwich Picture Gallery in South London. The exhibition is also being shown at a later date in two prestigious American Art Galleries, namely:
I went to see it last week and
I highly recommend it to all lovers of drawing, etchings, lithographs and drawings and paintings of the Thames.
As we were reminded on the curators' tour, as an etcher,
James McNeill Whistler has always been thought of as the successor to Rembrandt
(I looked this up and came across The Great Painter-Etchers - available to download and a good read!). He's certainly incredibly impressive and this exhibition is a masterclass in providing resource material to study his preparation and approach to picture making.
The other aspect I love about Whistler is the way he used
the masters of ukiyo-e - in particular
Hokusai and
Hiroshige - to influence his paintings - particularly their composition. This is most dramatically demonstrated in
Blue and Gold - Old Battersea Bridge (Tate Britain) which has been used as the motif for the exhibition - and can be seen in the photograph below.
The introduction to the exhibition by its two Glasgow University based curators
Professor Margaret F. MacDonald, who is a world authority on Whistler, and
Dr Patricia de Montfort was both very informative and less heavy-going than some I've been to. Their new blog linked to the exhibition is called
James McNeill Whistler and his Art. They've also written the catalogue which links to the exhibition.
Glasgow University has a major resource base related to Whistler:
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Curators of the exhibition - Dr Patricia Montfort and Professor Margaret F McDonald
Standing in front of Blue and Gold - Old Battersea Bridge |
The curators have been working on the exhibition for some 9 years with a bit of a blip for the economic crash. They're also the authors of the accompanying catalogue which is very readable and does the reader the courtesy of both following the themes of the exhibition and providing a catalogue for all the images! (Regular readers will recall I've been less enthusiastic of some catalogues of late). Readers visiting the exhibition in London may be a bit puzzled by some of the images - however the exhibition changes slightly when it goes to the USA. There are images which can only travel within the UK and images which cannot leave the Freer.
Key points about the exhibition
- it reflects a body of work by an artist who lived next to or near the Thames and drew and painted it repeatedly over a period of over 40 years (1859-1902)
- it shows Londoners what the Thames and its river traffic looked like in the latter half of the 19th century - and as it underwent the changes associated with eg the construction of the Embankment and the replacement and rebuilding of bridges
- the exhibition enables study of how Whistler developed his approach to art, in terms of subject matter, composition and technique.
- It includes a considerable amount of information about the Thames Set, Nocturnes, various methods of printmaking and the development of artwork associated with Battersea Bridge
- the works by Whistler in the exhibition are a mix of etchings, paintings - in both oil and watercolour, drawings in charcoal and pastel.
- the artwork is supplemented by photographs of the Thames during the era showing images of the locations, bridges, types of boats and watermen he was portraying and maps of the area covered by Whistler in drawing and painting the Thames.
For me the only thing it lacked an annotated map locating image to location. However the narratives for each image certainly made up for this in terms of identifying precisely what the image is of and where it was located.
So on to a bit more detail about the exhibition....