Note: This exhibition does look terrific. I've never wanted to visit Tel Aviv (or for that matter Israel) because of the degree of danger I associate with travel to the Middle East. But right now -- on this Sunday morning watching the morning news/pundit programs -- I'm terrified sitting in my own house, so perhaps I'll revise my views. I spent part of yesterday perusing Zondervan's Pictorial Bible Dictionary with great pleasure and interest. I sparked a memory of the time I studied at the Institute of Fine Arts at New York University and, to a one, my professors told me that Jerusalem was the most beautiful city in the world because of the quality of light there. My teachers included historians of the Italian and Northern Renaissance, Asian Art, Classical Antiquity and Modern Art. And Tel Aviv has a beach and, I am told, tremendous falafel.
This display at the Tel Aviv Museum features a selection of the etchings created by James Abbott McNeill Whistler (1834, Lowell, Massachusetts − 1903, London) − an American-born painter and etcher who worked in England and France in the mid-19th century. Whistler set off for Europe in 1855, when he was 21 years old − arriving in London and then moving on to Paris, where he enrolled at the École Impériale et Spéciale de Dessin. The following year, he studied at the atelier of the Swiss artist Charles Gleyre. Like his fellow artists Honoré Daumier, Jean-François Millet, and Édouard Manet, and like French Realists such as Gustave Courbet (whose art influenced him at the onset of his career), Whistler exploited the unique qualities of the etching medium to describe modern life from a socially and politically critical perspective.
The etchings included in this display feature modern cityscapes
transformed by industrialization and related economic and social
changes, as well as everyday scenes from the lives of the lower classes
in Paris and London. These prints include nostalgic and poetic images of
city life, views of the Thames enveloped in fog, and views of
dilapidated rural houses of the kind included in the two series "Twelve
Prints from Nature" ("The French Set") and "Sixteen Etchings of Scenes
on the Thames and Other Subjects" ("The Thames Set").
"The French Set" was published in Paris in November 1858, and
captured scenes from the trip taken by Whistler and his friend Ernst
Delannoy to Alsace-Lorraine and to the Rhine region in October 1858.
During his years in Paris, Whistler returned several times to
England (he settled there permanently in 1860), where he became deeply
interested in the medium of etching. Upon his return to Paris, he began
to create etchings himself. In 1857, he visited an exhibition in
Manchester that featured works by Diego Velázquez, Rembrandt, and other
17th-century artists. Following this encounter with Rembrandt, Whistler
planned a trip to Amsterdam to see the works of this Dutch master; a
lack of funds, however, led him to change his plans and to travel
instead to northern France, Luxembourg, and the Rhine region. In the
course of this journey, he created drawings and even some etchings of
simple rural views that appear in this set alongside his images of
everyday life in Paris; like Honoré Daumier's caricatures, these works
were created in reaction to the social reality of his time.
The etchings included in
this display feature modern cityscapes transformed by industrialization
and related economic and social changes, as well as everyday scenes
from the lives of the lower classes in Paris and London.
Following his return to Paris, he created several trial prints in
the workshop of the city's leading printmaker, August Delâtre, and then
chose the twelve etchings and title page) another etching created in the
course of this journey (that were published as "Twelve Etchings from
Nature." Although these etchings were not all concerned with French
themes, Whistler chose to call them "The French Set." His thematic and
stylistic choices reflect his affiliation with the modern, Realist
sensibility prevalent at that time among many French artists, as well as
the influence of 17th-century Spanish and Dutch art.
The etchings in this set are the first to reveal Whistler's artistic
maturity and boldness; they feature domestic and genre scenes,
portraits of children and friends, various figures seen in alleyways,
silhouettes, anonymous interiors, and rural scenes.
Among the portraits of personal acquaintances included in this
display are portraits of Annie (Ann Harriet Haden, the oldest daughter
of Whistler's half-sister and of the etcher, collector, and physicist
Sir Francis Seymour Haden) and Fumette (Whistler's term of endearment
for his companion and model during his student years in Paris). Among
the other figures represented by the artist are The Old Rag-Woman, The
Mustard Seller, the eccentric flower seller La Mère Gérard (a bourgeois
woman who had lost her money and made a living selling flowers at the
entrance to a popular dance hall), and the figures depicted in the
etchings In Full Sun, The Tinker, and other images of workmen, and
especially of working-class women. These characters represented various
aspects of urban life − a subject popular among French Realist artists,
who portrayed such types in a direct, un-idealized manner. Several of
these prints) including La Mère Gérard, In Full Sun, The Tinker and
Fumette (were created in Paris in the summer of 1858, before Whistler
set off on his journey. These etchings are characterized by delicate
lines and atmospheric effects, which were enhanced by the use of
brown-toned ink.
As Whistler's style continued to evolve over time, the Realist,
earthy quality of his images gave way to a more ethereal and spiritual
character. The print In Full Sun, for instance, is suffused by an airy,
sunlit quality that is related to the plein-air tradition embraced by
numerous French painters during those years.
The prints Street at Saverne and The Unsafe Tenement were both
created in Alsace. The Unsafe Tenement bespeaks the influence of the
Barbizon-School artist Charles Jacques, who frequently depicted
dilapidated farms and was influenced by 17th-century Dutch art. Whistler
traveled to Saverne to visit a friend who had studied with him in
Paris, and created the plate for this etching in the course of his
visit. This print is considered to be Whistler's earliest surviving
Nocturne (a subject that would later be developed in both his paintings
and prints, and which was inspired by musical harmonies and Japanese
prints). The drypoint The Mustard Seller depicts a young woman standing
in the doorway of a mustard store, while another woman is preparing an
order on the interior. In the course of his journey, Whistler created
several preparatory drawings for this print and for The Kitchen (one of
the most ambitious images in this set, due to the use of dramatic
chiaroscuro). When he returned to Paris, he used these drawings as the
basis for the etchings
The Old Rag-Woman, the first of Whistler's female profiles, inspired
numerous artists, and was one of Whistler's own favorites. This etching
is concerned with a subject that was also of interest to the Barbizon
artists. Although the plate was burned only after Whistler returned to
Paris, it was probably created directly from observation.
The title page for this set, which represents an artist drawing
outdoors, may be based on a drawing of Ernst Delaunay, Whistler's
travelling companion, sketching in the streets of Cologne. At the same
time, this figure appears to be wearing Whistler's clothes and hat, and
bears a close resemblance to Whistler himself.
In early November 1858, "The French Set" (the title page and 12
etchings) was first printed in Paris in an edition of 20. The
inscription on the title page of this set reads: "Twelve Etchings from
Nature (The French Set), by James Whistler, printed by Delâtre, 17 Rue
Saint-Jacques, Paris, November 1858." The bottom of the page bears the
dedication: "To my old friend, Seymour Haden."
With a daughter off to Tel Aviv tomorrow, I do not like to think about the risks of the Holy Land, but I agree that home does not feel any safer. I also agree with your teachers about Jerusalem. No other place merely visited on vacation has moved me so much.
ReplyDeleteI hope Merry's trip is great. It's art-related, correct? She's be fine. We'll visit someday, I'm sure. Please stay in touch. I've stopped reading the news or watching it on television. I'm too bummed out by all of it. Curtis
ReplyDelete