Detail from The Canal, Amsterdam, 1889, James McNeill Whistler, The Hunterian, University of Glasgow

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Valerie Susan Meux

Title: Lady Meux
Birthname: Langdon
Nationality: English
Date of birth: 1847
Date of death: 20 December 1910
Place of death: London
Category: collector

Identity:

Lady Valerie Susie Meux, née Langdon, married Henry Bruce Meux on 27 August 1878. He was a London brewer who became third and last baronet of Theobald's Park, Waltham Cross, Herefordshire in 1883. He died in 1900.

Life:

Lady Meux was not accepted by her husband's aristocratic family nor by polite Victorian society. She claimed to have been an actress before her marriage to Henry Meux, but was believed to have worked under the name Val Reece at the Casino de Venise in Holburn. The magazine Truth claimed that for a time she had cohabited with a certain Corporal Reece.

Painting three portraits of her in 1881 Whistler presented Lady Meux as a fashionable figure. Arrangement in Black: Lady Meux y228, Harmony in Pink and Grey: Portrait of Lady Meux y229 and Portrait of Lady Meux in Furs y230 were significant works for Whistler, being the first full-scale commissions to have been given him following his bankruptcy in 1879. They were also significant for Meux being painted by an artist of some notoriety.

The three works were commissioned in 1881 by Henry Meux for 1500 guineas: Whistler later agreed to accept 1200 guineas. A fourth portrait in riding habit was suggested but not begun. According to Leslie Ward it had been Charles Brookfield who had suggested that Whistler should paint Meux. Brookfield later drew a caricature of Whistler painting the three portraits which appeared in the Graphic on 25 March 1911.

On 27 June 1882 Whistler wrote to the London printseller A. Graves suggesting that he should have Harmony in Pink and Grey: Portrait of Lady Meux y229 engraved. The painting was caricatured in Punch on 27 May 1882 as 'To be completed in a few more Sittings'. It was exhibited in Dublin in 1884 and at the Goupil Gallery in February 1892. In December 1884 Whistler made a drawing of Portrait of Lady Meux in Furs y230, the only portrait not completed, for C. W. Dowdeswell which was reproduced in the Illustrated London News. According to Rosalind Birnie Philip, Whistler later destroyed Portrait of Lady Meux in Furs y230.

Meux and Whistler were in correspondence from 1886 to 1893. Their letters attest to their close relationship. In her will Meux excluded the Brudenell-Bruce family that had shunned her all her life.

Bibliography:

Young, Andrew McLaren, Margaret F. MacDonald, Robin Spencer, and Hamish Miles, The Paintings of James McNeill Whistler, New Haven and London, 1980 ; MacDonald, Margaret F., James McNeill Whistler. Drawings, Pastels and Watercolours. A Catalogue Raisonné, New Haven and London, 1995 MacDonald, Margaret F., Susan Galassi, Aileen Ribeiro, and Patricia de Montfort, Whistler, Women and Fashion, New Haven and London, 2003 .

The Correspondence of James McNeill Whistler, 1855-1903, edited by Margaret F. MacDonald, Patricia de Montfort and Nigel Thorp, Online edition, University of Glasgow.