TIME-LIFE LIBRARY OF ART HftRIN COUNTY FREE LIBRftRY [TTMEI BOOKS '7.95 FROM THl:T!!Vir LIBRARY OF ART Th( J of Whistler x\san apostle ofartistic freedom,James McNeill Whistler felt it his right to make a spectacle ofhimself. Ever in revolt against the stuffiness and rigidity ofVictorian society, this painter-showman carried innumerable chips on his shoulders. His self-satisfied bohcmiamsm may have masked feelings ofnever being completely at home, for he spent most ofhis lite as an American expatriate in England. But a deeper motive forhisbehavioristo be found in hisconception oftheartist'srolein society. In contrast to the popular Victorian belief that art should be edifying, Whistler's cry was: Art for Art's Sake. Artists, he argued, . should be responsible to nothing and no one, with beauty their only master. With this credo to guide him, Whistler played a flamboyant role in the movement that was to liberate art from the excesses of 19th Century sentimentality and open the way for the abstract art ofthe 20th Century. In so doing, the young American made some powerful enemies, most notably the critic John Ruskin, who considered Whistler's canvases chaotic and meaningless. Whistler, severely threatened by a Ruskin review of one ofhis paintings, immediately sued the critic for libel. The curiously tragi-comic trial that followed was a landmark in art history. The WorldofWhistler presents the artist's life and works against the background of the Victorian era and introduces the reader to some ofthe most interesting figures of the period: HenryJames, Thomas Carlylc, Algernon Charles Swinburne...Sir Edward Burne-Jones, William Morris,John Singer Sargent...Gustave Courbet, Henri Fantin- Latour and, ofcourse, one ofthe most famous mothers ofall times, Anna Whistler. More than 125 illustrations (almost halfin ^?%. !uil (olor) and nine picture essays detail the ;iri;.ius S';;,^cs ofWhistler's career and th'- ' cr-ri' ' " ,.>- ofhis contemporaries. ^ .'^."t^sll q Prideaux, Tom. 759.13 The world of Wlustler, 1834-1903, by Tom Prideaux and Whist- tlie editors of Time-Life Books. New York, Time-Life Iq-^ Books [1970] 191 p. illus,,col. plates, ports. 32 cm. (Time-Lifelibraryofart) 7.95 Issued in a case. LIBRAR"^ Bibliograpliy: p. 18]L«/\p|^j COUI^ITY 1. Wliistlei-, James Abbott McNeill, 1834-1903. i. Time-Life Boolis. u.Title. (Series) ND237.W6P7 '59.13 LW4/7l7o_i164.37 MARC Libr.nrv of (lousress 70 .4, The World of Whistler ma BOOKS ® LIFEWORLDLIBRARY LIFENATURELIBRARY TIMEREADINGPROGRAM THELIFEHISTORYOFTHEUNITEDSTATES LIFESCIENCELIBRARY GREATAGESOFMAN TIME-LIFELIBRARYOFART TIME-LIFELIBRARYOFAMERICA FOODSOFTHEWORLD THISFABULOUSCENTURY LIFELIBRARYOFPHOTOGRAPHY riMI 1.11 1. LIBRARY OF ARI The World of Whistler 1854-1905 by Tom Prideaux and the Editors of Time-Life Books Time-Life Books, New York AbouttheAuthor Formorethan 25 years an editorand drama critic for Life, Tom Prideauxretired from thatmagazine in 1970 to becomea full-time freelance writer. He came byhis interestinWhistlerwhilewritingThe WorldofDelacroixfortheTime-LifeLibrary ofArt.Intheyoungerartist,whocametoParistostudywhileDelacroixstoodatthe apexofhiscareer,Mr.Prideauxdiscoverednotonlyapainterwhohelpedtotakeart in new directions, but a man whose innate theatricality he found immensely appealing. A playwright himself, Mr. Prideaux is also the author, with Josephine Mayer,ofabookonancientEgypt,NevertoDie. TheConsultingEditor H. W. Janson is Professor of Fine Arts at New York University, where he is also ChairmanoftheDepartmentofFineArtsatWashingtonSquareCollege.Amonghis manypublicationsareHistoryofArtand TheSculptureofDonatello. TheConsultantforThisBook Theodore Reff is Professor of Art History at Columbia University, and has also taughtatTheJohnsHopkinsUniversityandPennsylvaniaStateUniversity.Aformer fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study and of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, Dr. Reff has edited the letters of Toulouse-Lautrec, is now editingthenotebooksofDegas,and istheauthorofnumerouspublicationson 19th and20thCenturyart. Onthe Slipcase ThisdetailfromWhistler'sNocturneinBlueandGold: OldBatterseaBridgeshows theelegant simplicityand subtle tonal harmony characteristicof the artist. Behind theoldwoodenbridgeinthemoonlight,thegoldensparksoffallingfireworksadda touch of warmth to the otherwise cool coloration. The complete painting is reproducedonpage135. EndPapers Front: Drawing, painting and etching the Thames was a favorite occupation of Whistler. This etching, done in the 1870s, is of London's Old Putney Bridge. The artist'sfamiliarbutterflyemblemisatlowerrightcenter.Back:Thelightandcolor ofVeniceservedWhistlerasaprofoundinspiration.ThisisaviewoftheRivadegli SchiavoninearthePiazzaSanMarco,doneabout1880. TIME-LIFE BOOKS TIME-LIFE LIBRARY OF ART editor: MaitlandA.Edey SERIESEDITOR:RobertMorton ExecutiveEditor:JerryKorn EditorialstaffforTheWorldofWhistler: TextDirector:MartinMann TextEditor:JayBrennan ArtDirector:SheldonCotler PictureEditor:KathleenShortall ChiefofResearch:BeatriceT.Dobie Designer:PaulJensen PictureEditor:RobertG.Mason StaffWriters:JohnvonHartz,PaulaPierce, AssistantTextDirectors:OgdenTanner,DianaHirsh SuzanneSeixas,TonyChiu AssistantArtDirector:ArnoldC.Holeywell ChiefResearcher:MarthaT.Goolrick AssistantChiefofResearch:MarthaT.Goolrick Researchers:MurielClarke,VilletteHarris, AssistantPictureEditor:MelvinL.Scott SusanJonas,SusannaSeymour DesignAssistant:MervynClay PUBLISHER:WalterC.Rohrer GeneralManager:JosephC.HazenJr. EDITORIAL PRODUCTION BusinessManager:JohnD.McSweeney ColorDirector:RobertL.Young ProductionManager:LouisBronzo Assistant:JamesJ.Cox CopyStaff:RosalindStubenberg,PatriciaMiller, SalesDirector:JoanD.Manley FlorenceKeith PromotionDirector:BeatriceK.Tolleris PictureDepartment:DoloresA.Littles, ManagingDirector,International:JohnA.Millington ElizabethDagenhardt Traffic:ArthurA.Goldberger ThefollowingindividualsanddepartmentsofTimeInc.helpedtoproducethisbook: Life staff photographer Carlo Bavagnoli; Editorial Production, Robert W. Boyd Jr.,MargaretT.Fischer; Editorial Reference.PeterDraz; PictureCollection,Doris O'Neil; Photographic Laboratory, George Karas; Time-Life News Service, Murray J. Gart; Correspondents Maria Vincenza Aloisi (Paris), Martha Bucknell and Phyllis Wise (Washington, D.C.), Nat Carnes (San Juan), Margot Hapgood and RosemaryYoung (London!,SerrellHillman (Toronto) andAnnNatanson (Rome). ©1970TimeInc.Allrightsreserved. PublishedsimultaneouslyinCanada. LibraryofCongresscataloguecardnumber70-116437. SchoolandlibrarydistributionbySilverBurdettCompany,Morristown,NewJersey. Contents A Yankee-Doodle Dandy 11 I II American on the Thames 37 III Brotherhood of Radicals 61 IV Whistler's Mother 77 V Triumph and Turmoil 101 VI A Scandalous Trial 121 VII Veneration in Venice 141 VIII "Art for Art's Sake" 167 Chronology ofArtists: 186 Bibliography: 187 Credits and Acknowledgments: 188 Index: 189 Whistler'sengagingarroganceisunmistakablein thismultipleportraitetchingmadeinthe 1880s byMortimerMenpes.
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