James Abbott McNeill Whistler
American, 1834–1903
Invented in the late eighteenth century, fine art lithography first flourished in the nineteenth century and Whistler was a master of this medium. To make a lithograph, an artist can either work directly on a lithographic stone or draw with a lithographic pencil on special paper. When the drawing on paper is placed face down on the lithographic limestone surface, the greasy pencil marks are transferred to the stone, which is then printed as usual. Although lithography could successfully imitate either pen lines or the softer appearance of chalk and was often used to reproduce drawings, artists also experimented with the technique and used it in many other ways. Although he often drew on paper, this lithotint was worked directly on a previously tinted stone, using both ink and chalk. Whistler then scraped away the areas that he wanted to print as lighter passages. In the 1870s, Whistler had occupied himself painting many night scenes of the Thames River shrouded in mist. He produced at least thirty-two examples of paintings of this type, and this lithotint produced in 1878 mirrors that approach in depicting the river near Battersea. This was a portion of the riverfront that he saw daily from his residence across the river in Chelsea. Whistler’s printer Thomas Way watched Whistler work on the print, “and later recalled that the artist’s composition was ‘drawn in the dark, by feeling not sight.’ Whistler before beginning it, commented, ‘Now let us see if we can remember a Nocturne.”
See "Fleeting Impressions: Prints by James McNeill Whistler,” exh. cat., (Montgmery, AL: Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, 2006), 85.
American, 1834–1903
Nocturne
1878
Object Type:
Print
Creation Place:
North America, American
Dimensions:
6 13/16 in. x 10 1/2 in. (17.3 cm x 26.67 cm)
Medium and Support:
Lithotint on wove paper
Accession Number:
1999.0007.0152
Credit Line:
Gift of Jean K. Weil in memory of Adolph "Bucks" Weil, Jr.
Invented in the late eighteenth century, fine art lithography first flourished in the nineteenth century and Whistler was a master of this medium. To make a lithograph, an artist can either work directly on a lithographic stone or draw with a lithographic pencil on special paper. When the drawing on paper is placed face down on the lithographic limestone surface, the greasy pencil marks are transferred to the stone, which is then printed as usual. Although lithography could successfully imitate either pen lines or the softer appearance of chalk and was often used to reproduce drawings, artists also experimented with the technique and used it in many other ways. Although he often drew on paper, this lithotint was worked directly on a previously tinted stone, using both ink and chalk. Whistler then scraped away the areas that he wanted to print as lighter passages. In the 1870s, Whistler had occupied himself painting many night scenes of the Thames River shrouded in mist. He produced at least thirty-two examples of paintings of this type, and this lithotint produced in 1878 mirrors that approach in depicting the river near Battersea. This was a portion of the riverfront that he saw daily from his residence across the river in Chelsea. Whistler’s printer Thomas Way watched Whistler work on the print, “and later recalled that the artist’s composition was ‘drawn in the dark, by feeling not sight.’ Whistler before beginning it, commented, ‘Now let us see if we can remember a Nocturne.”
See "Fleeting Impressions: Prints by James McNeill Whistler,” exh. cat., (Montgmery, AL: Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, 2006), 85.
Keywords
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Nocture
Night Scenes
Night Scenes
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