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According to Theoba1d, quoted by the Pennells,
'somewhere early in the 'eighties ... I became the fortunate possessor of some thirty or forty drawings or pastels through the Dowdeswells ... they some times brought [Whistler] to my house ...[in] Westbourne Square. The pictures, owing to stress of space, hung mostly on the stair case, and Whistler would stand in rapt admiration before them ... when he wanted to borrow the pictures … it was a labour of Hercules to retrieve them.' 1
The drawings sold by Theobald in 1893 were described by Way as 'mostly slight and struck me as being "early studies" (such as the Mummy Cloth & Notes for Dress) "unfinished sketches" or "schemes" for more complete works' and they were 'mostly bought by the Trade.' 2 Theobald retained possession of a group of 16 watercolours and 3 pastels, which he sold to Charles Lang Freer (1856-1919) on 20 June 1902 (Voucher, Freer Gallery Archives).
Whistler borrowed 15 of Theobald's pictures for an exhibition at Petit's gallery in Paris in 1887, and in 1888 he wrote again, asking Theobald to lend more for exhibition in Munich, 'After all you have these beautiful things always with you - like the poor! - and seldom indeed shall I trouble you for their loan!' 3
Last updated: 23rd February 2021 by Margaret