Date: Fri 17-Sep-1999
Date: Fri 17-Sep-1999
Publication: Ant
Author: CAROLL
Quick Words:
Wesleyan-Davison-Whistler
Full Text:
Wesleyan's Davison Art Center Exhibits Whistler Etchings
(with 3 cuts)
MIDDLETOWN, CONN. -- Etchings by the American expatriate artist James McNeill
Whistler are featured in an exhibition of prints by French, English and
American artists active in the Nineteenth Century etching revival. In addition
to superb impressions of Whistler's etchings, the exhibition includes works by
Whistler's English brother-in-law, Seymour Haden; the French Barbizon
painter-etchers Jean-Francois Millet and Charles Daubigny; and the American
etchers Thomas Moran and Joseph Pennell. The exhibition at the Davison Art
Center closes on October 17.
A brilliant artist and fascinating personality, Whistler was strongly
influenced by the etchings he saw in France in the 1850s. He played a central
role in the English etching revival and greatly influenced American collectors
and painter-etchers, who were late arrivals to the international etching
movement. Whistler's work commanded respect from a wide-ranging audience
including Charles Baudelaire, who described the artist's prints as the
"profound and intricate poetry of a vast capital."
The impressions of Whistler's etchings shown in this exhibition all came from
the collection of George W. Davison (1872-1953, BA Wesleyan 1892), a New York
banker, discerning print collector, and benefactor of the Davison Art Center.
It was primarily through the generosity of Mr Davison that the collection has
such outstanding holdings of prints by Whistler as well as by his English and
European forerunners.
Whistler and Haden were among the most important figures associated with the
etching revival in England during the second half of the Nineteenth Century.
Both men emphasized the importance of original etching as opposed to
illustration, an idea which had a lasting effect on the work of their younger
American contemporaries.
While the etching revival began somewhat earlier in England, the movement in
France enjoyed a much wider base and exerted a far greater influence on the
medium. The Barbizon painters were among the earliest French artists to revive
etching. On view are works by Daubigny, Millet, and Henri Rousseau. Soon other
French artists, including the brilliant and eccentric Charles Meryon, began
making etchings. Selections from Meryon's "Eaux-Fortes sur Paris (Etchings of
Paris)," the artist's personal and somewhat morbid interpretations of the city
of Paris, are included in the exhibition.
In the 1870s, etching was promoted in America by societies and clubs which,
following Whistler and Haden, stressed the importance of etching as a creative
medium. Painter-etchers including Moran, Pennell, Julian Alden Weir and John
Henry Twachtman produced outstanding etchings and were influential in
educating a new, younger generation of artists in the medium.
The Davison Art Center is at 301 High Street. Telephone, 860/685-2500.