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A focused investigation of Whistler's watercolors that introduces
readers to a rarely seen aspect of the artist's creative output In
the 1880s, James McNeill Whistler (1834-1903) reinvented himself
through the medium of watercolor. At the time, excellence in
watercolor was most often associated with British artists, and most
notably with the work of J. M. W. Turner (1775-1851). Whistler's
embrace of watercolor allowed the expatriate artist to present
himself as an heir to the great Turner, while at the same time
creating easily portable works that could supply an American market
and, the artist hoped, help secure his art-historical legacy in his
home country. Indeed, it was the American Gilded Age industrialist
Charles Lang Freer who would amass the largest collection of
Whistler's watercolors, eventually bequeathing them to the
Smithsonian in 1906. This publication is the first systematic study
of Freer's amazing treasure trove of more than 50 watercolors by
Whistler and includes figures, landscapes, nocturnes, and
interiors. Providing both an art-historical context that looks into
the contemporary reception of the works, as well as rigorous
scientific analysis of Whistler's materials and techniques, this
volume offers a groundbreaking look into an overlooked segment of
the celebrated artist's oeuvre.
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