Whistler on art : selected letters and writings of James McNeill Whistler

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Whistler on art : selected letters and writings of James McNeill Whistler

edited with an introduction by Nigel Thorp

(Fyfield books)

Carcanet, c2004

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

Previous ed.: 1994

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

James McNeill Whistler (1834-1903), the American-born painter and etcher, became a crucial link between the Paris and London art worlds of the mid-nineteenth century. Influenced first by Courbet's realism, he evolved his own distinctive aesthetic, stressing 'an arrangement of line, form and colour first'. His Nocturnes are among the most highly-regarded of his works. He wrote more than 5,000 letters which, with his published writing and conversations, illuminate his work and his contentious relations with the art world of the time. Whistler on Art includes seventy-five items: letters (many not published before) and material recording his disillusionment with English approaches to art and his response to the French, Scottish and American art worlds. Whistler was a friend of the Pre-Raphaelites and enjoyed a fruitful dialogue with Swinburne and with Wilde (whom he later accused of plagiarism) and emerged at the centre of the Aesthetic Movement. Against Ruskin (who attacked him) he won a libel suit and a farthing's damages. The trial sharpened Whistler's polemical gifts, and he wrote stinging pamphlets and letters to the press. In his Ten O'Clock Lecture he attacked Ruskin's view of t

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