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It is not known what happened to this nocturne at the time of Whistler's bankruptcy. It is possible that it was bought by Wickham Flower (1835-1904), and bequeathed to his wife in 1904: she certainly owned it by the following year, when she lent it to the Whistler Memorial Exhibition in London, and was listed as the owner by Bernhard Sickert (1862-1932) in 1908. 1
It was recorded as bought on 17 January 1912 by the Whittemores from Knoedler's. 2
The early exhibition history is uncertain.
1878: However, it is possible that it was shown at the Grosvenor Gallery in 1878 when 'Nocturne in Blue and Silver' was described in a review of the exhibition, by the art critic of the Times, as 'the Thames in a mist, as we infer from what looks like a clock tower gleaming through the haze.' 3 A foggier description appeared in the Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 14 May 1878: 'a river in as fog, with yellow streaks here and there for lights.'
In 1878 the Sheffield Independent commented on Whistler's 'half-dozen pictures like plates of smoked glass.' 4 All three Nocturnes (Nocturne in Blue and Silver [YMSM 151], Nocturne in Blue and Gold [YMSM 154], and Nocturne: Grey and Gold - Chelsea Snow [YMSM 174]) were also discussed in the Magazine of Art:
'Three of the small canvases are clever renderings of various effects of London fog, works full of intelligence, and quite subtly adroit in some passages, as in the value of the floating bank of smoke in one of the "Nocturnes" '. 5
1883: The nocturne under discussion may also have been shown in Paris when 'Nocturne en bleu et argent' was described by Alfred Lostalot as a 'marine au clair de la lune' and in another somewhat naive review as 'Là-bas une ville ou village, où trois peupliers et un clocher se dressent en obélisques sur le ciel très sobrement donné; en revanche, une mer, ou un lac immense.' 6
1898: It is less likely that it was the 'Nocturne – Blue and Gold' shown at Goupil's in 1898 (but see Nocturne: Westminster - Grey and Gold [YMSM 144]).
1905: The first definite showing was in 1905, when it was lent by Mrs Flower, the widow of Wickham Flower, to the Whistler Memorial exhibition in London.
1: B. Sickert 1908 A [more] (cat. no. 67).
2: Smith, Ann Y., Hidden in Plain Sight: The Whittemore Collection and the French Impressionists, Garnet Hill Publishing Co. and Mattatuck Historical Society, 2009, p. 93.
3: 'The Grosvenor Gallery,' The Times, London, 2 May 1878, p. 7.
4: 'Grosvenor Gallery', Sheffield Independent, 2 May 1878.
5: Anon, 'The Grosvenor Gallery', Magazine of Art, 1878, p. 51.
6: Lostalot 1883 [more] , at p. 80. Unidentified press cutting in GUL Whistler PC 7, p. 15. See also Nocturne: Blue and Silver - Chelsea [YMSM 103].
Last updated: 6th February 2021 by Margaret