1800s JAMES WHISTLER SIGNED Etching Chelsea Church & Battersea Bridge FRAMED COA

$2,709.00

Artist: James Abbott McNeill Whistler (American, 1834-1903))
Title: Chelsea (Chelsea Church and Battersea Bridge)
Medium: Antique etching on wove paper.
Year: 1882
Signature: Signed in the plate (Butterfly monogram, lower right).
Condition: Excellent (You would be hard pressed to find one in Nicer Condition)
Dimensions: Image Size c. 5 x 8 inches.
Framing: Gallery framed and matted c. 15 x 18 inches.
James James Abbott McNeill Whistler was an American painter active during the American Gilded Age and based primarily in the United Kingdom. He eschewed sentimentality and moral allusion in painting and was a leading proponent of the credo “art for art’s sake”. His signature for his paintings took the shape of a stylized butterfly possessing a long stinger for a tail. The symbol combined both aspects of his personality: his art is marked by a subtle delicacy, while his public persona was combative. He found a parallel between painting and music, and entitled many of his paintings “arrangements”, “harmonies”, and “nocturnes”, emphasizing the primacy of tonal harmony. His most famous painting, Arrangement in Grey and Black No. 1 (1871), commonly known as Whistler’s Mother, is a revered and often parodied portrait of motherhood. Whistler influenced the art world and the broader culture of his time with his theories and his friendships with other leading artists and writers. Whistler was inspired by and incorporated many sources in his art, including the work of Rembrandt, Velázquez, and ancient Greek sculpture to develop his own highly influential and individual style. He was adept in many media, with over 500 paintings, as well as etchings, pastels, watercolors, drawings, and lithographs. Whistler was a leader in the Aesthetic Movement, promoting, writing, and lecturing on the “art for art’s sake” philosophy. With his pupils, he advocated simple design, economy of means, the avoidance of over-labored technique, and the tonal harmony of the final result. Whistler has been the subject of many major museum exhibitions, studies, and publications. Like the Impressionists, he employed nature as an artistic resource. Whistler insisted that it was the artist’s obligation to interpret what he saw, not be a slave to reality, and to “bring forth from chaos glorious harmony”. During his life, he influenced two generations of artists, in Europe and in the United States. Whistler had significant contact and exchanged ideas and ideals with Realist, Impressionist, and Symbolist painters. The artist Walter Sickert was his pupil, and the writer Oscar Wilde was his friend. His Tonalism had a profound effect on many American artists, including John Singer Sargent, William Merritt Chase, Henry Salem Hubbell and Willis Seaver Adams (whom he befriended in Venice). Another significant influence was upon Arthur Frank Mathews, whom Whistler met in Paris in the late 1890s. Mathews took Whistler’s Tonalism to San Francisco, spawning a broad use of that technique among turn-of-the-century California artists. As American critic Charles Caffin wrote in 1907: He did better than attract a few followers and imitators; he influenced the whole world of art. Consciously or unconsciously, his presence is felt in countless studios; his genius permeates modern artistic thought. During a fourteen-month stay in Venice in 1879 and 1880, Whistler created a series of etchings and pastels that not only reinvigorated his finances (this was after he’d declared bankruptcy following the Ruskin trial), but also re-energized the way in which artists and photographers interpreted the city—focusing on the back alleys, side canals, entrance ways, and architectural patterns—and capturing the city’s unique atmospherics. In 1940 Whistler was commemorated on a United States postage stamp when the U.S. Post Office issued a set of 35 stamps commemorating America’s famous authors, poets, educators, scientists, composers, artists, and inventors: the Famous Americans Series. The Gilbert and Sullivan operetta Patience pokes fun at the Aesthetic movement, and the lead character of Reginald Bunthorne is often identified as a send-up of Oscar Wilde, though Bunthorne is more likely an amalgam of several prominent artists, writers, and Aesthetic figures. Bunthorne wears a monocle and has prominent white streaks in his dark hair, as did Whistler. Novelist Henry James “had become well enough acquainted with Whistler to base several fictional characters on the ‘queer little Londonized Southerner,’ most notably in Roderick Hudson and The Tragic Muse”. Whistler “also appeared as one of Henry James’s most attractive minor characters, the sculptor Gloriani in The Ambassadors, whose personality, way of life, and even home are closely based on Whistler.”

Customer Testimonials

Salvador
Salvador
I am so pleased with this purchase. I am always a little leary about buying old prints but this has been my favorite purchase and best experience in a long time. Thank you so much for the very high quality, the excellent price, the speedy delivery and a most fitting description. I am sooo pleased. Great doing business with you!!!!
Barry
Barry
A beautiful engraving done by my ancestor, artist JD Watson. Terrific price and super quick and safe shipping. A+++ seller.
Barry
Barry
A beautiful engraving done by my ancestor, artist JD Watson. Terrific price and super quick and safe shipping. A+++ seller.
Levinfl
Levinfl
Most excellent seller This is the focal point of my collection
Bobbi
Bobbi
The seller was totally accommodating about responding to questions and working out details about the framing. Exceptionally beautiful results!! Many thanks!!! The packaging was absolutely secure. A wonderful experience working with a conscientious professional.
Agarfield50
Agarfield50
The print arrived EXACTLY when the seller said it would; the quality was simply EXCELLENT; and the frame was SUPERB. I am so happy with this art work and will probably buy again. What a relief to find honest art dealers. Thank you.
 mtgtreasurecompany
mtgtreasurecompany
Great Gift!!!
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1800s james whistler signed etching chelsea church & battersea bridge framed coa1800s JAMES WHISTLER SIGNED Etching Chelsea Church & Battersea Bridge FRAMED COA
$2,709.00