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Whistler was determined to prevent the artist Giovanni Boldini (1845-1931) from seeing a self-portrait – possibly Brown and Gold [YMSM 440] or Gold and Brown [YMSM 462] – because he planned to exhibit it at the ISSPG with Boldini's recent (1897) portrait of Whistler (now in the Brooklyn Museum). 1 However, Boldini refused to lend his portrait, so no comparison between them was possible at the time.
In 1898, Whistler made a sketch for Albert Ludovici, Jr (1852-1932) of the proposed hanging of his works, Arrangement of paintings at the ISSPG [M.1539], adding, 'So if I send my portrait you will put it between the Rosa Corder and the Princess - leaving nice margin - and keeping all on line, more than in sketch.' 2
In the end Whistler exhibited The Thames in Ice [YMSM 036], Grey and Silver: La Petite Souris [YMSM 502], At the Piano [YMSM 024], Arrangement in Brown and Black: Portrait of Miss Rosa Corder [YMSM 203], La Princesse du pays de la porcelaine [YMSM 050], Rose and Brown: The Philosopher [YMSM 472], Blue and Coral: The Little Blue Bonnet [YMSM 500], Nocturne in Blue and Gold: Valparaiso Bay [YMSM 076], and, at the last minute, the painting under discussion, Gold and Brown [YMSM 462].
The Morning Post commented not only on this painting, which was described as a 'sketch', but on the court case relating to Brown and Gold: Portrait of Lady Eden [YMSM 408]:
'Gold and Brown is the name given to a sketch-portrait of the painter, his hand raised as gesticulating responsively to an utterance of his that may be assumed to have gleeful reference to the result of his litigation in Paris, since the catalogue contains extracts from the summing up of the Advocate-General and the judgment of the President of the Court of Appeal.' 3
Last updated: 13th November 2020 by Margaret