When exhibited in Whistler's one-man exhibition in 1874 'Symphony in Blue and Pink' was described favourably in a press cutting from the Globe, that was kept by the artist:
'As another attractive feature of the gallery, we have a certain number of designs for pictures. These are painted in oil, but without any fullness of realisation, and giving merely the artist's first thought of the design and colour that is to be thrown into the finished work. One of these represents four female figures on the sea shore; another is of some girls arranging flowers in bright sunlight; and there are two more, neither of which reveal to us their subject with sufficient clearness. We just perceive a fascination of dimly suggested scheme of colour, and note here and there a graceful attitude defining itself from the obscurity of the general mist.' 1
This painting was in the panel exhibited at Petit's in 1899 and was drawn in a sketch sent to Rosalind Birnie Philip (1873-1958) on 5 December, Five paintings at the Galerie Georges Petit [M.1600]. 2
C. L. Freer lent the painting to exhibitions in his lifetime, including the Boston exhibition of 1904, where the 'Projects' were exhibited together, as shown in the photograph reproduced above. However, by the terms of C. L. Freer's bequest to the Freer Gallery of Art, the painting cannot now be lent to any other venue.
Last updated: 4th December 2020 by Margaret