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According to the Pennells, 22 February 1878 C. A. Howell recorded in his diary the purchase of 'a sketch of Miss Alexander' together with four other works from Whistler for £50. 1 The provenance is somewhat confusing and not entirely complete.
According to a later owner, F. G. Macomber, it was at one time owned by the collector and textile manufacturer T. G. Arthur (who died in February 1907, and had then been living for ten years in Algiers). The Art Journal in October 1897 reproduced it as the property of Boussod, Valadon & Co. 2 Since the butterfly signature is of the kind used by Whistler in 1897, it was probably signed by Whistler with his butterfly at the request of Boussod, Valadon & Co.
However, although the precise details are not known, the painting seems to have stayed in Scotland, or returned there. It was consigned by the important Glasgow collector William Burrell to Christie's, 16 May 1902 (lot 158) but failed to sell and was bought in by Hardy at 85 guineas. According to Singer, it was owned in 1905 by 'Alexander Barr' but this was almost certainly incorrect since in the same year it was lent by the Glasgow dealer Alexander Reid to the Whistler Memorial Exhibition in London (cat. no. 74), and it was sold by Reid to Wunderlich's in March 1907, for £400. 3 Shortly afterwards it was in America and was lent anonymously to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, in June 1907.
The next ten years are less clear, partly because its history overlaps with that of Alice Butt (1) [YMSM 437].
It may have been owned in 1907 by F. G. Macomber, Boston, who had, at some time unknown, bought it from Durand-Ruel, Paris and New York dealer, for $425. 4 It passed to his daughter, Mrs Charles Lyman, and granddaughter, Mrs J. Hampden Robb, and then to Richard L. Jackson, who lent it to Princeton University Art Museum, N.J. It was on the market through the Adams Davidson Galleries in 1972, and sold to the Petersen Galleries, Beverly Hills, in September 1978. Dr John Larkin bought it in March 1879.
It was later sold to Jack Warner of the Gulf States Paper Corporation, which later became the Westervelt Company. The Westervelt collection was housed in Tuscaloosa Museum of Art, which closed in 2018, after Jack Warner's death. The painting remained in the possession of the Gulf States Foundation in 2018 and by 2019 was placed on deposit at Christie's, New York, with a view to selling it. Its current whereabouts is unknown.
The size was given incorrectly in the catalogue as 10 x 14 1/2 inches.
1: Pennell 1921C [more] , p. 69. The other works were Girl with Cherry Blossom [YMSM 090], Nocturne [YMSM 114] or Nocturne: Blue and Silver - Battersea Reach [YMSM 119], Nocturne: Grey and Gold - Chelsea Snow [YMSM 174], and Sketch for a Portrait of Henry Greaves [YMSM 198].
2: Art Journal October 1897 [more] , repr. at p. 290.
3: Information from A. McN. Reid, 1963, GUL WPP file; see also Singer 1905 A [more] , repr. f.p. 36.
4: Information from Mrs Lyman Robb, GUL WPP. She said he bought it in 1902 but this is incorrect.
Last updated: 21st October 2020 by Margaret