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Whistler's
Correspondence
A note by Lynn Roberts
Whistler was as copious a letter-writer
as any of his famous nineteenth-century peers, and a large tranche
of this correspondence, covering the period 1855-1880, is now
accessible on the internet at www.whistler.arts.gla.ac.uk/correspondence.
The letters, by, to and concerning
Whistler, are extremely well indexed, and a great many of them
can be read in transcript online; others provide full references
for their locations, together with the first line of the letter,
telegram or legal document.
The correspondence which refers
directly to frames is divided into that on 'framemakers', 'frames',
'picture frames', 'painting frames', and different types of frame
('frames, colour', 'frames, etching', 'frames, lithograph', 'frames,
mounts', 'frames, pastel', and 'pastel, framing'); there are
also related sections on 'gallery decoration', 'house decoration',
etc.
Any researcher interested in
Whistler's frames will find names of framemakers and detailed
instructions to them; for example, in a letter from Whistler
to Henry Murcott, picture framer, carver and gilder, of 4 February
1878: I want you to make me at once another frame like the
last two Please remember this time that second moulding you missed
before - also let the inside flats be of the same oak as the
rest of the frame - (and not stucco preparation) also
let there be a glass - and have the pale green [double underlined]
gold. This frame may have been intended for Nocturne
in Blue and Silver (c.1872-78; private collection).
There are also letters to and
from friends who liased with framemakers for Whistler; documents
dealing with framing firms to which he owed money; information
on the colour of gold leaf and of gallery decoration; prices;
styles of mounts and frames for etchings, etc (with sketches,
not shown on the website). All letters are fully annotated, and
there are links giving biographical details (for instance, of
Murcott, above), and details of the pictures referred to. This
first section of the correspondence is a small part of the 10,000
or so documents which will eventually be included or referred
to on this website.
The Correspondence of James
McNeill Whistler, 1855-1903,
edited by Margaret F. MacDonald, Patricia de Montfort and Nigel
Thorp; including The Correspondence of Anna McNeill Whistler,
1855-1880, edited by Georgia Toutziari. On-line Centenary
edition, Centre for Whistler Studies, University of Glasgow,
2003.
September 2003
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