James Abbott McNeill Whistler, Illustration to The Trial Sermon (2). / Wood engraving by Dalziel after a design by Whistler. Published in Good Words 1862..
122 mm x 95 mm. © Photo: Royal Academy of Arts, London.
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After James Abbott McNeill Whistler (1834 - 1903)
RA Collection: Art
122 mm x 95 mm
Good words - London: 1860-1906
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The colour white can be as challenging for the painter as the blank white sheet of paper is for the writer. Ian McKeever RA reflects on James McNeill Whistler’s ability to create form using one of the most elusive colours.
You’d be forgiven for thinking our exhibition ‘Whistler’s Woman in White’ was all about Whistler, but there’s a whole host of artists, models and writers in the show. Get to know them here…
We’ve filled our galleries with Whistler, Klimt, and Rossetti’s paintings of women wearing white gowns, but what started this trend in the 1860s? Professor Lara Feigel explores the literary origins of this aesthetic moment.
Take a tour of the exhibition ‘Whistler’s Woman in White: Joanna Hiffernan’ with its curators, and delve into the life of the artist’s principal model.
Do an advanced search in works of art, names, books, exhibition catalogues, archives, or frames.
When should this exhibition be published?