The Paintings of James McNeill Whistler

YMSM 434
Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew

Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew

Artist: James McNeill Whistler
Date: 1895
Collection: The Hunterian, University of Glasgow
Accession Number: GLAHA 46337
Medium: oil
Support: canvas
Size: 60.6 x 45.5 cm (23 7/8 x 17 7/8")
Signature: none
Inscription: none

Date

Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew dates from about 1895. 1

Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew, The Hunterian
Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew, The Hunterian

It is dated from the technique and Whistler's known contact with the model. It could, however, have been touched up later.

Images

Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew, The Hunterian, University of Glasgow
Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew, The Hunterian, University of Glasgow

Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew (detail, lips), The Hunterian
Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew (detail, lips), The Hunterian

Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew (infrared reflectogram), The Hunterian
Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew (infrared reflectogram), The Hunterian

Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew (ultraviolet photograph), The Hunterian
Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew (ultraviolet photograph), The Hunterian

Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew (verso), The Hunterian
Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew (verso), The Hunterian

E. L. Sambourne, Hetty and Lily Pettigrew, photograph, Leighton House
E. L. Sambourne, Hetty and Lily Pettigrew, photograph, Leighton House

E. L. Sambourne, Hetty and Lily Pettigrew, photograph, Leighton House
E. L. Sambourne, Hetty and Lily Pettigrew, photograph, Leighton House

Subject

Titles

Whistler's original title is not known. The suggested title is:

Description

Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew, The Hunterian
Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew, The Hunterian

A half-length portrait of a young woman in vertical format. She has brown eyes and short brown curly hair, and is facing the viewer. Her arms are crossed with her left hand grasping her right upper arm. She wears a simple high-necked black or dark grey dress, possibly with a shawl. The background is also very dark.

Sitter

Lilian Pettigrew (b. 1870).

E. L. Sambourne, Hetty and Lily Pettigrew, photograph, Leighton House
E. L. Sambourne, Hetty and Lily Pettigrew, photograph, Leighton House

There were three Pettigrew sisters, Bessie ('Hetty'), the oldest, Rose the youngest, and Lily. Their mother brought them to London when Lily was about 14. They posed first for Millais' An Idyll of 1745 in 1884 (Lady Lever Art Gallery, Port Sunlight). John Everett Millais (1829-1896) described them as 'three little gypsies ... with the characteristic carelessness of their race, they just came when they liked.' 4

E. L. Sambourne, Hetty and Lily Pettigrew, photograph, Leighton House
E. L. Sambourne, Hetty and Lily Pettigrew, photograph, Leighton House

The sisters posed many times, both nude and clothed (see the photographs above), for Edward Linley Sambourne (1844-1910). All three were very popular as models, posing to Edward John Poynter (1836-1919), Rudolph Onslow Ford (1875-1914), Frederick Leighton (1830-1896), William Holman Hunt (1827-1910), Valentine Cameron Prinsep (1836-1904), John Singer Sargent (1856-1925), Philip Wilson Steer (1860-1942) and Walter Richard Sickert (1860-1942). She also posed to Whistler as Eve y491.

In her memoirs Rose described her sister Lily as having 'most beautiful curly red hair, violet eyes, a beautiful mouth, classic nose, and beautifully shaped face, long neck, well set, and a most exquisite figure; in fact, she was perfection!' 5

Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew, The Hunterian
Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew, The Hunterian

Whistler's portrait accentuates these features, her neck and her arms seem to be in the process of being rubbed out and made even thinner; she has big brown eyes and bushy hair; her mouth and her hand are very strange in shape, and brushed in boldly. The portrait is in fact unusually mannered in pose and detail.

Technique

Technique

Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew, The Hunterian
Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew, The Hunterian

Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew (verso), The Hunterian
Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew (verso), The Hunterian

It is on a fine weave closely-woven canvas. Although it was undoubtedly painted in London, the canvas was perhaps acquired in Paris, since it appears to be a 'toile de 12' (61 x 46 cm). It was painted freely with thinned paint in broad brush strokes.

The painting was examined in February 2020, when a full technical examination was carried out in the School of Culture and Creative Arts Technical Art History laboratory in the Hunterian at Kelvin Hall. Professors Joyce H. Townsend and Margaret F. MacDonald examined the painting under a microscope. A high resolution camera for infra-red reflectography (IRR) was operated by Tess Visser, a PhD student supervised by Professor Christina Young, assisted by Alicia Hughes, Hunterian curatorial assistant. Images were also made of the verso, and of the recto in normal, raking, and ultraviolet light.

The canvas is uniformly thinly painted, thinner than the width of the canvas threads and following their contours. It was rubbed or wiped down in several areas, particularly the face.

Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew (detail, lips), The Hunterian
Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew (detail, lips), The Hunterian

Both the lips and the highlight on the nose (the thickest paint of the face) have been rubbed down to reveal a lower layer of paint, but the rubbing does not go down as far as the top of the canvas threads. It reveals a greyer layer that is a very thin light grey priming. In the bodice the rubbing-down reaches the top of the canvas threads, again revealing the light grey priming. There are many cracks following the line of the threads: this suggests the rubbing was done to dry paint, not wet, and this caused the cracking. The composition was thus built up over several sessions, not painted all at once, au premier coup.

The rubbing down may have been done with very fine sandpaper or a pumice stone, rather than a cloth. 6 Whistler had incorporated such rubbing down in his studio practise for years. In a letter to his wife in 1892, regarding the portrait Arrangement in Black and Gold: Comte Robert de Montesquiou-Fezensac y398, he wrote:

'I was determined to go through with the whole picture in one perfect final coating - for which I had been enabled to prepare the canvass with one last scraping, and pommice [sic] stoning and washing and the terrible bag of tricks that we know only too well!' 7

In the portrait of Lily Pettigrew, there is no evidence of under-drawing. The costume appears to be not fully resolved at the neck and right cuff. It has full sleeves, possibly in a lighter or more sheer fabric. Her waist is just barely defined. Her hair originally extended further out. The fingers of the left hand (the flesh paint including large particles of bone black) were very lightly brushed in. Even after this reworking, the costume remained unresolved at the neck and at the cuff of the left hand. The sitter’s right hand is plausibly not visible, since her arms are folded and the full sleeve conceals it.

Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew (infrared reflectogram), The Hunterian
Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew (infrared reflectogram), The Hunterian

The infrared reflectogram shows more clearly than the painting itself that her arms are folded and the hands therefore at the same height, whilst suggesting that the sleeves may have a different fabric from the small-waisted bodice.

It is clear that bone black has been extensively used in the paint, both in the dark areas and flesh colours. In the flesh paint, there is also a deep pink organic pigment that may be madder. It is in the red lips, too, but the darker red between the lips is a different, bluer deep pink organic pigment. The shadows of the nose have a larger amount of bone black.

There are two pink layers of thin paint in the face. In the white of the eye there is a slight degree of mixing in of blue pigment, possibly Prussian blue. Light paint was applied to build up her features as highlights, working from dark to light.

Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew (ultraviolet photograph), The Hunterian
Portrait Study of Lily Pettigrew (ultraviolet photograph), The Hunterian

Some minor reworking was done after the painting was first varnished – though Whistler might have regarded this as a ‘retouching varnish’ that enabled him to see more clearly which areas required more work. This included an area under her right ear, some adjustment of the neckline, and fine horizontal lines outlining her eyes, accentuating her exotic looks. There may also have been a final brushstroke of a little madder for the lips.

The painting was finally revarnished with a varnish of natural resin type.

Conservation History

The canvas has been neatly trimmed, then lined to another canvas. The stretcher might have been reused since the canvas dimensions are visibly unchanged, but might equally be a replacement. A thick varnish of natural resin type was applied at this time or later, since it runs onto the lining canvas. This could have occurred in Whistler’s lifetime, though given the late date of the work it was more likely a posthumous treatment.

History

Provenance

Exhibitions

As far as is known, it was not exhibited in Whistler's lifetime.

By the terms of Miss Birnie Philip's gift to the University of Glasgow, it is not lendable.

Bibliography

Catalogues Raisonnés

Authored by Whistler

Catalogues 1855-1905

Journals 1855-1905

Monographs

Books on Whistler

Books, General

Catalogues 1906-Present

Journals 1906-Present

Websites

Unpublished

Other


Notes:

1: YMSM 1980 [more] (cat. no. 434).

2: James McNeill Whistler, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, 1936 (cat. no. 33).

3: YMSM 1980 [more] (cat. no. 434).

4: Millais, John Guile, The Life and Letters of John Everett Millais, London, 1899, vol. 1, p. 165, painting by Millais repr. f.p. 436.

5: Mss in GUL MacColl P/64; 'Autobiographical essay by Rose Pettigrew', in Laughton 1971 [more], pp. 113-14.

6: Whistler mentioned, apropos of Brown and Gold: Portrait of Lady Eden y408 'I have been sand papering it down all the afternoon', letter to R. Birnie Philip, [30 October 1899], FUW #04755.

7: Whistler to Beatrice Whistler, [24 January 1892], GUW #06606.