Only one title is known:
Arrangement in Blue and Green [YMSM 193] may have been one of a series of 'Blue Girls', possibly The Blue Girl: Maud Franklin [YMSM 112].
It was described by Blackburn as a 'full-length portrait of a young lady.' 3 One reviewer said the portrait had 'the appearance of a young lady attired either in an indigo riding habit or in the gaberdine ... of a blue coat boy.' 4 Similarly the Dublin Evening Telegraph on 6 May 1878 described it as 'the portrait of a young lady which every one mistakes for that of a Blue-coat boy with a long gaberdine of blue and light riding habit of a dim green.' A blue frock coat, high necked, buttoned closely over the chest, with a belt, and with full long skirts, was the traditional uniform of boys from the charity Bluecoat Schools.
A more detailed but unflattering description appeared in The Ipswich Journal. After asserting that 'a friendly cynic' suggested that Whistler should not send the portrait to the Grosvenor, the critic added:
'his "arrangement in blue and green" hangs upon Sir Coutts Lindsay's walls, a hideous deformity. It is a tall girl, whose face is a mere lifeless and senseless daub, while her bombazine skirts, looming heavily on a dark background of no particular colour, constitutes the artist's "arrangement in blue and green," with which he flatters the public.' 5
Bombazine was a fine twilled fabric, and could be of silk, a silk-mix, worsted or cotton. It was often dyed black for mourning but obviously in this case it was blue.
The Magazine of Art merely stated said the model wore a 'blue velvet dress, which is imitatively treated', while the British Architect specified the colour as 'peacock blue.' 6 However, the colour was clearly not dominant: the Newcastle Courant commented on 3 May 1878 that 'Mr. Whistler's "Arrangement in blue and green," and "Harmony in blue and yellow," have anything but an agreeable effect, the outlines of the figures being in a great measure lost and merged into the background.'
It was probably a portrait of Maud Franklin (1857-ca 1941) , for it was compared with Arrangement in White and Black [YMSM 185], which was in the same exhibition: 'two full length portraits of the same lady, one in peacock blue, the other in white satin.' 7
1: II Summer Exhibition, Grosvenor Gallery, London, 1878 (cat. no. 24).
2: YMSM 1980 [more] ( cat. no. 193).
3: Blackburn 1878 [more] , p. 14.
4: Unidentified press cutting, [1878], GUL Whistler PC I, p. 93.
5: 'London Notes', The Ipswich Journal, 7 May 1878, p. 2.
6: Magazine of Art 1878 [more] ; British Architect, 1878, press cutting in GUL Whistler PC 2, p. 12.
7: British Architect, 1878, op. cit.
Last updated: 31st December 2020 by Margaret