Provenance
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1882 or after: according to the Art Journal, 'a sepia drawing [sic] of Old Battersea Bridge' was given by Whistler to'Walter McNay'; 1
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1903: sold at auction, Christie's, London, 23 November 1903 (lot 141) and bought by Obach, London dealers, 32 gns.
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1904: acquired by
Frederick Keppel (1845-1912)
, New York art dealer.
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Date unknown: acquired by
Henry Harper Benedict (1844-1935);
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1935: bequeathed to his widow,
Katherine Geddes Benedict (1879-1961)
, and daughter,
Josephine Katherine Benedict, Mrs James Douglass Sharpe (ca 1918-1946)
;
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1962: sold at auction, London, Sotheby, 21 November 1962 (lot 7, repr.) and bought by Weitzner for Agnew, London dealers (#J2913);
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1963: sold on 9 August to Milton McGreevy (1903-1980), Kansas City;
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1963: given by Milton McGreevy and his wife, Barbara McGreevy née James (1905-1996), through the Mission Fund, to the Nelson-Atkins Museum.
'Walter McNay' may have been Walter Lawrie MacNay (1866-1946), of the London Etching Co., son of
Thomas Fothergill McNay (1836-1907) and
Mary Isabella Cooke (Mrs T. F. McNay) (m. 1865) (1840-1906). His sister
Eleanor ('Nora') Ruth McNay (1868-1886) was sketched by Whistler shortly before her death (see Portrait of Miss Nora McNay
[YMSM 348]) and it is possible that this watercolour was given to the McNays around that time.
For further details see MacDonald 1995 (cat. rais.) [more]
(cat. no. 874).
Exhibitions
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1904:
Etchings, Dry-Points, and a Few Drawings by Whistler, Frederick Keppel & Co., New York, 1904 (cat. no. 107) as 'Putney Bridge'.
Notes:
1: Anon., 'Sales, Art Journal, 1904, pp. 31-33, at p. 31.