James McNeill Whistler
Nocturne
1878
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James McNeill Whistler
Nocturne
1878
Physical Qualities
Etching and drypoint, Sheet (trimmed to platemark): 201 x 294 mm. (7 15/16 x 11 9/16 in.)
Credit Line
The Conrad Collection
Object Number
1932.17.11
For centuries, artists have been drawn to the picturesque waterways and grand architecture of Venice. In 1879, James McNeil Whistler first traveled to the city to create a series of prints on commission from a London gallery called the Fine Art Society. He produced over fifty etchings that explored his vision of the locale, many of which were published in the First and Second Venice Sets. Traversing the city, Whistler recorded quick sketches of the subjects that inspired him.
He then transformed these views during the printing process by hand-inking and wiping each copper plate, varying the amount of tone used to depict light and shadow expressively. "Nocturne" is the most dramatic example of his “artistic printing.” In this distant view of the churches of Santa Maria della Salute and San Giorgio Maggiore, Whistler turned each impression into a unique image that captures the ephemeral effects of time and weather on sky and water.
Bought from Bendann in 1914
Whistler and Cassatt: Americans Abroad
New Arrivals: Gifts of Art for a New Century
Prints: Wood-Blocks, Etchings, Mezzotints, Lithographs - Durer to Matisse
Etchings by Whistler
2006-05-10 00:00:00
2006-05-10 00:00:00
A Century of Baltimore Collecting 1840-1940
Nancy Patz, 'How to Choose a Print,' "Newsletter," The Print, Drawing & Photograph Society of The Baltimore Museum of Art, Vol. 28, No. 1, Spring 2010, pp. 14-17, ill p. 16. [interview with Jay Fisher and Rena Hoisington]
Inscribed: on tab in graphite: butterfly "imp."
