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Possible titles include:
The original ISSPG title of 1901 'Gold and Orange: The Neighbours' is generally accepted.
A street scene in vertical format. It focusses on the ground floor of a house, with windows either side of a dark door, which has a skylight above it, and the lower part of a balcony above. A woman is just visible standing within the doorway, wearing a white bonnet and apron over a voluminous skirt. Another woman stands on the doorstep, at right, her arms crossed. She is similarly dressed, with a dark greenish-blue scarf at her neck, a white apron over her rosy pink skirt. The women's features are not clear. Several pale pink and dark grey items, possibly clothes or bed-linen, are hung over the balcony to air.
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The painting conveys a subdued, intimate realism. Denys Sutton (1917-1991) commented on its 'Mallarméan allusiveness': 'Whistler appears to hint at inner meanings and to provide the stuff for interpretation; thus, a strange hallucinatory atmosphere is suggested by the presence of the two old women.' 7
1: 3rd Exhibition, Pictures, Drawings, Prints and Sculptures, International Society of Sculptors, Painters and Gravers, Galleries of the Royal Institute, London, 1901 (cat. no. 34).
2: Douzième Exposition, Ouvrages de Peintures, Sculpture, Dessin, Gravure, Architecture et Objets d'Art, Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts, Grand Palais, Paris, 1902 (cat. no. 1196).
3: Thirty-ninth Annual Exhibition of Oil Paintings by Artists of the British and Foreign Schools, Thomas McLean's Gallery, London, 1903 (cat. no. 32).
4: Whistler to Mrs E. K. Johnson, 1 February 1903, GUW #09891.
5: GUL Whistler BP II Ledger c, p. 164.
Last updated: 12th November 2020 by Margaret