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

 

Brown and Gold

Composition


                    Brown and Gold, The Hunterian
Brown and Gold, The Hunterian
Velázquez, Pablo de Valladolid , photograph, GUL Whistler PH 3/9
Velázquez, Pablo de Valladolid , photograph, GUL Whistler PH 3/9
Velázquez, Pablo de Valladolid, Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid
Velázquez, Pablo de Valladolid, Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid

The pose is based on the portrait of Pablo de Valladolid by Diego Rodriguez de Silva y Velázquez (1599-1660), in the Prado, of which Whistler owned a photograph. 1

Technique


                    Brown and Gold, The Hunterian
Brown and Gold, The Hunterian

It was painted on a medium-weight, fairly open plain-weave canvas, which was lined with a more tightly woven plain tabby-weave canvas.

According to the Pennells, Whistler regretted the exhibition of his portrait in 1900: it was 'far from successful, and he had little pleasure in it.' 2 Whistler also told the Pennells, 'It was not ready, the colour has sunk in, you cannot see it.' 3 He also wrote to Edward Guthrie Kennedy (1849-1932) on 12 May 1900, 'I feared it might have been too sunken in to be at all seen.' 4

It is painted thinly, with layers of soft criss-crossing brush strokes. The face looks as if it has been rubbed down and the right hand and foot are very vague.

Albert Eugene Gallatin (1882-1952) claimed that Whistler repainted it in part after its exhibition in 1900. 5 Whistler's executrix, Rosalind Birnie Philip (1873-1958), wrote that, on the contrary, it had been rubbed down in 1900 and not repainted. 6

Conservation History

When it was restored by Harry Woolford in 1983 he mentioned evidence of extensive damage and retouching, and also noted an area of what looked like scorch marks on the clothing and background. He removed the retouching and varnished the picture. Clare Meredith also commented on surface abrasions and signs of damage to the surface, and it is not clear if this was the result of the artist's rubbing down or later cleaning. She commented that although the varnish to some extent concealed the damaged surface, 'The overall effect is probably far removed from the artist's preference for the thinner varnish.' 7

Frame


                    Brown and Gold, The Hunterian
Brown and Gold, The Hunterian

                    Brown and Gold, frame detail
Brown and Gold, frame detail

Flat Whistler frame. 8

Notes:

1: Pablo de Valladolid, ca 1635, oil, Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid, P01198; photograph, GUL Whistler PH 3/9, Glasgow University Collections website at http://collections.gla.ac.uk/#/details/ecatalogue/337948 (acc. 2020).

2: Pennell 1908 [more] , vol. 2, p. 204.

3: Pennell 1921C [more] , pp. 40, 199.

4: [12 May 1900], GUW #09800.

5: Gallatin 1913 A [more] , p. 21 (no. 8).

6: Miss Birnie Philip to A. E. Gallatin, 2 December 1913, GUL Whistler BP III.

7: Condition report by Clare Meredith, conservator, 23 April 2001, Hunterian files.

8: Dr S. L. Parkerson Day, Report on frames, 2017; see also Parkerson 2007 [more] .

Last updated: 22nd October 2020 by Margaret