The Paintings of James McNeill Whistler

M.1562
r.: Butterfly 'Encountered'; v.: Butterfly

r.: Butterfly 'Encountered'; v.: Butterfly

Artist: James McNeill Whistler
Date: 1899
Collection: Art Institute of Chicago
Accession Number: 1933.288
Medium: r.: pen and black ink over pencil; v.: pencil
Support: cream wove card
Size: 6 1/8 x 4 3/4" (155 x 121 mm)
Signature: butterfly
Inscription: r.: 'top./ "Encountered" ' and sideways 'size from highest point of tail to bottom of lowest foot.' Collector's mark of 'WSB' ( Walter Stanton Brewster); v.: in unknown hands '33.285/oc 4123'

Date

r.: Butterfly 'Encountered'; v.: Butterfly was drawn in 1899 as an illustration for Whistler 1899 (F)[more].

r.: Butterfly 'Encountered', Art Institute of Chicago
r.: Butterfly 'Encountered', Art Institute of Chicago

It is catalogued in MacDonald 1995 (cat. rais.) [more] (cat. no. 1562).

Images

r.: Butterfly 'Encountered', Art Institute of Chicago
r.: Butterfly 'Encountered', Art Institute of Chicago

Verso not reproduced.

Subject

Description

r.: Butterfly 'Encountered', Art Institute of Chicago
r.: Butterfly 'Encountered', Art Institute of Chicago

Comments

In 1894 William Eden (1849-1915) commissioned a portrait of his wife Sybil Frances Grey, Lady Eden (1867-1945). Whistler, dissatisfied with the amount (100gns) and manner of payment, retained and altered the portrait (Brown and Gold: Portrait of Lady Eden y408). After an appeal, in December 1897, the Court de Cassation let him retain the portrait but return the money. Whistler was well satisfied to see the Code Napoléon altered, to specify an artist's right to decide the fate of his works.

Whistler planned to publish an account of the affair, a compilation of letters, newspaper reports and legal documents, with William Heinemann (1863-1920), who had published the Gentle Art of Making Enemies in 1890. There was some problem with publishing in London, and, with Heinemann’s tacit agreement, Louis-Henry May in Paris took over the publication. A first proof was run off, using mainly butterflies originally drawn for the Gentle Art of Making Enemies. These butterflies were mostly replaced by new ones, in a second proof. There are at least two versions of some of the designs. They were slightly reduced in size in the final publication.

For the book, Whistler designed 15 butterflies, a club (A club on a cushion m1564), and a frog (Frog m1553). He also drew some butterflies which were not used (v.: Butterfly; r.: see No. 1268 m1572, Butterfly with chequered wings m1578, r.: Butterfly; v.: Butterfly with chequered wings m1579). The Baronet and the Butterfly was comparatively sparing of butterflies. Many marginal annotations, which in the Gentle Art of Making Enemies would have warranted a butterfly, did not get one. Some of the butterflies were very badly reproduced (r. and v.: Butterfly m1561, r.: Butterfly 'Encountered'; v.: Butterfly m1562). There were obviously publication problems, and it was not an entirely satisfactory venture. However, Whistler did not admit of criticism and seems, publicly, to have been entirely satisfied with the outcome.

Technique

Composition

r.: Butterfly 'Encountered', Art Institute of Chicago
r.: Butterfly 'Encountered', Art Institute of Chicago

This was drawn for publication in Whistler 1899 (F)[more]. The butterfly was inexpertly copied for reproduction.

Technique

The pencil work is a bit smudged to left, and there are some ink stains at the lower left and right corners. It was drawn with separate, weak, lines of shading. The butterfly wings were originally smaller, the two antennae closer together and the right foot possibly further to the left. In addition, the tail had a much wider sweep to the right. The butterfly on the verso is the opposite way up to that on the recto.

See further details in Clarke, Jay A., and Sarah Kelly Oehler, eds., Whistler Paintings and Drawings at the Art Institute of Chicago, The Art Institute of Chicago, 2020, website.

Conservation History

It is on card, a little darkened at the edges, with rough edges on three sides (straight at the bottom). It has pinholes, at the corners left and bottom right, two above left corner and one above centre.

History

Provenance

The earlier provenance is unknown. See MacDonald 1995 (cat. rais.) [more] (cat. no. 1561).

Exhibitions

It was not exhibited in Whistler's lifetime.

Bibliography

Catalogues Raisonnés

Authored by Whistler

Websites


Notes: