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James '''Abbott''' '''McNeill Whistler''' ( July 11 , 1834 – July 17 , 1903 ) was an American -born, British -based painter and etcher. Averse to sentimentality in painting, he was a leading proponent of the credo " Art For Art's Sake ". He took to signing his paintings with a stylized butterfly, possessing a long stinger for a tail.Mr. Whistler's Art, Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery {Link without Title} The symbol was apt, for Whistler's art was characterized by a subtle delicacy, in contrast to his combative public persona. EARLY LIFE Whistler was born in remains unclear. CAREER AND CONTROVERSY ) popularly known as Whistler's Mother ]] Whistler is best known for the nearly monochromatic full-length figure titled ''Arrangement in Gray and Black: Portrait of the Artist's Mother'', but usually referred to as '' Whistler's Mother ''. The painting was later purchased by the French government. Though American, Whistler lived and worked mainly in Britain and France. Whistler's painting ( 1862 ) caused controversy when exhibited in London and, later, at the '' Salon Des Refusés '' in Paris. The painting epitomizes his theory that art should essentially be concerned with the beautiful arrangement of colors in harmony, not with the accurate portrayal of the natural world. The Peacock Room In the 1870s Whistler painted full length portraits of . The room was designed and painted in a rich and unified palette of brilliant blue-greens with over-glazing and metallic leaf, and is considered a high example of the Anglo-Japanese Style . Artist and patron quarreled so violently over the room and the proper compensation for the work that their relationship was terminated. The entire room was later purchased by industrialist and aesthete Charles Lang Freer , and installed in his collection. The published communications between Freer and Whistler reveal how Whistler's interest in those collecting his work in his native country (The United States) transitioned over many decades. Worldwide recognition Despite seemingly courting controversy wherever he went, Whistler achieved worldwide recognition during his lifetime. In 1884 he was elected an honorary member of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Munich. In 1892 he was made an officer of the Legion D'Honneur in France and he became a charter member and first president of the International Society Of Sculptors, Painters, & Gravers in 1898 . Ruskin trial In '', writing: :For Mr. Whistler's own sake, no less than for the protection of the purchaser, Sir Coutts Lindsay [founder of the ask two hundred Guineas for flinging a pot of paint in the public's face At the trail, the lawyer for ''? "Half a day." replied Whistler. "So," continued the lawyer, "you are charging two hundred guineas for half a day's work?" "No." replied Whistler. "For the experience of a life time." Though suing for one thousand pounds plus costs, Whistler won a mere Farthing in nominal Damages . The cost of the case, together with huge debts from building his residence, "The White House" in Tite Street , Chelsea , (designed with E. W. Godwin , 1877–8) bankrupted him. ).]] Other relationships Friendly with various French artists, he illustrated the book ''Les Chauves-Souris'' with Antonio De La Gandara . He also knew the Impressionists , notably Edouard Manet and Edgar Degas , and was a leading figure in the Aesthetic Movement . As a young artist, he maintained a close friendship with Dante Gabriel Rossetti , a member of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. Whistler's lover and model for ''The White Girl'', Joanna Hiffernan, also posed for Gustave Courbet . Historians speculate that Courbet's erotic painting of her as '' L'Origine Du Monde '' led to the breakup of the friendship between Whistler and Courbet. In 1888, Whistler married Beatrix, the widow of E. W. Godwin . The five years of their marriage (before her death from cancer) were very happy. He was well-known for his biting wit, especially in exchanges with his friend Oscar Wilde . Both were figures in the Café Society of Paris at the turn of the 20th Century . It was once said that the young Oscar Wilde attended one of Whistler's dinners, and hearing his host make some brilliant remark, Wilde apparently said, "I wish I'd said that". Whistler riposted, "You will, Oscar, you will!" Printmaking A supremely gifted engraver, Whistler produced numerous etchings, lithographs, and dry-points. His lithographs, some drawn on stone, others drawn directly on "lithographie" paper, are perhaps half as numerous as his etchings. Some of the lithographs are of figures slightly draped; two or three of the very finest are of Thames subjects — including a "nocturne" at Limehouse; while others depict the Fauburg St Germain in Paris, and Georgian churches in Soho and Bloomsbury in London. The etchings include portraits of family, mistresses, and intimate street scenes in London and Venice . LEGACY Whistler's influence was significant, and has been the subject of museum exhibitions and publications. A trip to Venice in 1880 to create a series of etchings not only reinvigorated Whistler's finances, but also re-energized the way in which artists and photographers interpreted the city. His tonalism had a profound effect on many American artists, including John Singer Sargent and William Merritt Chase . Famous protégés included Oscar Wilde and Impressionist painter Walter Sickert ; Whistler fell out with both Wilde and Sickert. He successfully sued Sickert in the 1890 s over a minor legal issue in France. When Wilde was publicly acknowledged to be a Homosexual in 1895 , Whistler openly mocked him. 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. Once, after he had suffered a heart attack, a Dutch newspaper Incorrectly Reported Whistler dead. He wrote to the newspaper, saying that reading his own obituary induced a "tender glow of health". Whistler published two books which detailed his thoughts on life and art: ''Ten O'Clock Lecture'' (1885), and ''The Gentle Art of Making Enemies'' (1890). He was, in turn, the subject of a contemporaneous biography by a friend: the printmaker Joseph Pennell collaborated with his wife Elizabeth Robins Pennell to write ''The Life of James Mcneill Whistler'', published in 1908. Whistler's belief that art should concentrate on the arrangement of colors led many critics to see his work as a precursor of abstract art. He is buried at St Nicholas's Church in Chiswick , London . GALLERY   |
Image:James Abbot McNeill Whistler 010jpg''Nocturne In Gray And Gold,
| "http://wwwinformationdelightinfo/information/entry/Westminster_Bridge" class="copylinks">Westminster Bridge '' (c 1871-1874) |
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