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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #66392 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/66392)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Four Masters of Etching, by Frederick
-Wedmore
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Four Masters of Etching
-
-Author: Frederick Wedmore
-
-Release Date: September 27, 2021 [eBook #66392]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Charlene Taylor and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
- at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive/American
- Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FOUR MASTERS OF ETCHING ***
-
-
-
-
- FOUR MASTERS OF ETCHING
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-
- This Edition is limited to
- Two Hundred and Fifty Copies.
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- _FOUR MASTERS OF ETCHING_.
-
-
-
-
- BY
-
- FREDERICK WEDMORE.
-
-
-
-
- WITH ORIGINAL ETCHINGS
-
- BY
-
- HADEN, JACQUEMART, WHISTLER, AND LEGROS.
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
-
- _THE FINE ART SOCIETY, LIMITED._
-
- 148, NEW BOND STREET.
-
- 1883.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE
-
-
-IT is well to say, in a word or two, what this short book aims at.
-Unavoidably inferior to Mr. Hamerton’s in merit, it is voluntarily much
-more limited in scheme. Taking only the four artists who seem to me most
-worthy of note among the many good etchers of our day, it seeks to study
-their work with a degree of detail unnecessary and even impossible in a
-volume of wider scope. In trying to do this, it can hardly help
-affording, at least incidentally, some notion of what I hold to be the
-right principles of etching, nor can it wholly ignore the relation of
-etching to other art, or the relation of Art to Nature and Life. But
-these points are touched but briefly, and only by the way.
-
-A book of larger aim, on Etching in England and France, might
-justifiably have given almost as much importance to Macbeth and Tissot
-here, and to Bracquemond there, as has been given in the annexed pages
-to Haden, Whistler, Jacquemart, and Legros. But Macbeth and Tissot
-belong to a younger generation than do any of my four masters. Much of
-what the art of etching could do in modern days was already in evidence
-before their work began. My four masters are four pioneers. Bracquemond
-may be a pioneer also; but in his original work, skilled and individual
-as that is, he has chosen to be very limited. The place he occupies is
-honourable, but it is small.
-
-About the four chapters that here follow I need say very little. That on
-Seymour Haden has been passed through the _Art Journal_, that on Legros
-through the _Academy_, that on Jules Jacquemart through the _Nineteenth
-Century_. All have now been revised. Something of the chapter on
-Whistler has also appeared in the _Nineteenth Century_, but in quite
-different form, and I will explain why. In the first place, since that
-article appeared, Mr. Whistler has given me cause to modify to some
-extent my estimate of his art. Having seen this cause, I have acted on
-it. I am not a Mede nor a Persian. And in a system of criticism which
-seeks to inquire and understand, rather than to denounce, there is place
-for change. Again, much of the article in the _Nineteenth Century_ was
-occasioned not by Mr. Whistler’s practice, but by the attack which he
-made upon a great teacher and critic, and, by implication, upon all
-critics who allow themselves that abstinence from technical labour which
-is often essential if their criticism is to be neither immature for want
-of time to spend on it nor prejudiced because of their exclusive
-association with some special ways or cliques in art. Whatever dealt
-with this business I have now withdrawn. It was written for a particular
-purpose, and its purpose was served.
-
-A word now on a matter of detail. Two expressions in the body of this
-volume—“our _Dusty Millers_” (page 10), and “_M. Rodin_ here” (page
-42)—which only the really careful reader will honour me by noticing, are
-due to the fact that after the body of the volume was finally printed,
-some change was made in the choice of the illustrations. For Mr. Haden’s
-copper of _Dusty Millers_, I have been happy to be able to substitute
-_Grim Spain_, the only Spanish subject of his which I thoroughly like.
-And in place of M. Legros’s learned but hardly attractive portrait of M.
-Rodin, it has been still more fortunate that it has been possible to
-procure the portrait of Mr. Watts, the painter, one of the most
-triumphant instances of Legros’s art.
-
- F. W.
-
-_London, 1883._
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS.
-
-
- PAGE
- CHAPTER I. SEYMOUR HADEN 1
-
- CHAPTER II. JULES JACQUEMART 12
-
- CHAPTER III. J. A. M. WHISTLER 28
-
- CHAPTER IV. ALPHONSE LEGROS 40
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-
- PAGE
-
- “GRIM SPAIN” Etched by F. SEYMOUR 10
- HADEN
-
- ORIENTAL PORCELAIN by JULES JACQUEMART 16
-
- PUTNEY by J. A. MCN. WHISTLER 36
-
- PORTRAIT OF G. F. by ALPHONSE LEGROS 42
- WATTS, R.A.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- SEYMOUR HADEN.
-
-
-PERHAPS the two qualities which, as one gets a little _blasé_ about the
-productions of Art, continue the most to stir and stimulate, and to
-quicken the sense of enjoyment, are the quality of vigour and the
-quality of exquisiteness. If an artist is so fortunate as to possess
-both these virtues in any fulness, he is sure not only to please a
-chosen public during several generations, but to please the individual
-student—if he be a capable student—at all times and in all moods, and,
-of the two, perhaps, that is really the severer test. But to have these
-qualities in any fulness, and in equal measure, is given to a man only
-here and there over the range of centuries. It is given to a Titian, it
-is given to a Rembrandt, and of course to a Turner; it is given in the
-days of the Grand Monarch to a Watteau, and in the days of the Second
-Empire to a Méryon. But so notable and rare a union is denied—is it
-not?—even to a Velasquez; while what we praise most in Moreau le Jeune
-is by no means a facility of vigour, and what is characteristic of David
-Cox is certainly no charm of exquisiteness. To unite the two qualities—I
-mean always, of course, in the fulness and equality first spoken
-of—demands not a rich temperament alone. The full display of either by
-itself demands that. It demands a temperament of quite exceptional
-variety: the presence, it sometimes seems, almost of two
-personalities—so unlike are the two phases of the gift which we call
-genius.
-
-With the artists of energy and vigour I class Mr. Seymour Haden. Theirs
-is the race to which, indeed, quite obviously, he belongs. Alive,
-undoubtedly, to grace of form, fire and vehemence of expression are yet
-his dominant qualities. With him, as the artistic problem is first
-conceived, so must it be executed, and it must be executed immediately.
-His energy is not to be exhausted, but of patience there is a smaller
-stock. For him, as a rule, no second thought is the wisest; there is no
-fruitful revision, no going back to-day upon yesterday’s effort; little
-of careful piecing and patching, to put slowly right what was wrong to
-begin with. He is the artist of the first impression. Probably it was
-just and justly conveyed; but if not, there the failure stands, such as
-it is, to be either remembered or forgotten, but hardly to be retrieved.
-Such as it is, it is done with, no more to be recalled than the player’s
-last night’s performance of Hamlet or Macbeth. Other things will be in
-the future: the player is looking forward to to-night; but last
-night—that is altogether in the past.
-
-There is no understanding Seymour Haden’s work, its virtues and
-deficiencies, unless this note of his temperament, this characteristic
-of his productions, is continually borne in mind. It is the secret of
-his especial delight in the art of etching; the secret of the particular
-uses to which he has so resolutely applied that art. With the admission
-of the characteristic, comes necessarily the admission of the limitation
-it suggests. Accustomed to labour and patience, not only in the
-preparation for the practice of an art, but in the actual practice of
-it, one may possibly be suspicious of the art which substantially
-demands that its work shall be done in a day if it is to be done at all.
-Such art, one says, forfeits, at all events, its claim to the rank that
-is accorded to the _œuvre de longue haleine_, when that is carried to a
-successful issue and not to an impotent conclusion. To flicker bravely
-for an hour; to burn continuously at a white heat—they are very
-different matters. The mental powers which the two acts typify must be
-differently valued. And the art that asks, as one of its conditions,
-that it shall be swift, not only because swiftness is sometimes
-effective, but because the steadiness of sustained effort has a
-difficulty of its own—that art, to use an illustration from poetry and
-from music, takes up its place, voluntarily, with the lyrists, and with
-Schubert, as we knew him of old—foregoes voluntarily all comparison with
-the epic, and with Beethoven.
-
-Well, this remark—a remonstrance we can hardly call it—has undoubtedly
-to be accepted. Only it must be laid to Mr. Seymour Haden’s credit that
-he has shown a rare sagacity in the choice of his method of expression.
-The conditions of the art of etching—a special branch of the engraver’s
-art, and not to be considered wholly alone—are fitted precisely to his
-temperament, and suit his means to perfection. Etching is qualified
-especially to give the fullest effect to the mental impression with the
-least possible expenditure of merely tedious work. Etching is for the
-vigorous sketch—and it is for the exquisite sketch likewise. It is for
-the work in which suggestion may be ample and unstinted, but in which
-realisation may, if the artist chooses, hardly be pursued at all. To say
-that, has become one of the commonplaces of criticism. We are not all of
-us so gifted, however, that commonplaces are to be dispensed with for
-the remainder of time.
-
-Of the great bygone masters of the art, some have pursued it in Mr.
-Haden’s way, and others have made it approach more nearly to the work of
-the deliberate engraver. Vandyke etched as a speedy and decisive
-sketcher; the later and elaborate work added to his plates was added by
-other hands, and produced only a monotonous completeness destructive of
-the first charm, the charm of the vivid impression. Méryon, whose noble
-work Mr. Haden has rightly felt and pronounced to be “not impulsive and
-spontaneous, but reflective and constructive, slow and laborious,” used
-etching evidently in a different method and for different ends. With
-something of the patience of a deliberate line-engraver, he built up his
-work, piece by piece and stroke by stroke: touching here, and tinkering
-there—he says so himself—and the wonder of it is, that for all his
-slowness and delay, the work itself remains simple and broad, and the
-poetical motive is held fast to. This Mr. Haden has expressly
-recognised. Nothing eluded Méryon. The impressions that with some men
-come and go, he pertinaciously retained. Through all mechanical
-difficulties, his own quality of concentrativeness preserved to his work
-the quality of unity. Then, again, it must be said that the greatest
-etcher of old time, Rembrandt, and one of the greatest, Claude, employed
-the two methods, and found the art equal to the expression both of the
-first fancy and of the realised fact. To see which, one may compare the
-first state of Rembrandt’s _Clément de Jonghe_—with its rapid seizure of
-the features of a character of extraordinary subtlety—and the _Ephraim
-Bonus_, with its deliberate record of face and gesture, dress and
-environment; and in Claude the exquisite free sketching in the first
-state of _Shepherd and Shepherdess_ with the quite final work of the
-second state of _Le Bouvier_. Mr. Haden, then, has full justification
-for his view of etching; yet Mr. Haden’s view of etching is not the only
-one that can be held with fairness.
-
-For all but forty years now Seymour Haden has been an etcher, so that we
-may naturally see in his work the characteristics of youth and those of
-an advanced maturity, in which, nevertheless, the eye is not dimmed nor
-the natural fire abated. That is to say, the mass of his labour—over a
-hundred and eighty etchings—already affords the opportunity of
-comparison between subjects essayed with the careful and delicate
-timidity of a student of twenty, and subjects disposed of with the
-command and assurance that come of years, of experience, and—may I
-add?—of recognition. But in his early time Mr. Haden did but little on
-the copper, and then he would have had no reason to resent the title of
-“amateur,” now somewhat unreasonably bestowed on a workman who has given
-us the _Agamemnon_, the _Sunset on the Thames_, the _Sawley_, and the
-_Calais Pier_. Somewhere, perhaps, knocking about the world are the six
-little plates, chiefly of Roman subjects, which Mr. Haden painfully and
-delicately engraved in the years 1843 and 1844. All that remains of
-them, known to the curious in such matters, is a tiny group of
-impressions cherished in the upper chambers of a house in Hertford
-Street—a scanty barrier, indeed, between these first tentative efforts
-and oblivion.
-
-But in 1858 and 1859 Mr. Haden began to etch seriously; he began to give
-up to the practice of this particular way of draughtsmanship a measure
-of time that permitted well-addressed efforts and serious
-accomplishments. Fine conceptions in all the Arts ask, as their most
-essential condition, some leisure of mind, some power of acquisition of
-the happy mood in which one sees the world best, and in which one can
-labour joyously at passing on the vision. The best Art may be produced
-with trouble, but it must be with the “joyful trouble” of Macduff.
-Nothing is more marked in the long array of Mr. Haden’s mature work than
-the sense of pleasure he has had in doing it. How much, generally, has
-it been the result of pleasant impressions! How much the most
-satisfactory and sufficient has it been when it has been the most
-spontaneous! Compare the absolute unity, the clearly apparent motive, of
-such an etching as _Sunset on the Thames_ with the more obscure aim and
-more limited achievement of the _Windsor_. The plates of the fruitful
-years 1859, 1860, 1863, 1864, and so onward, were done, it seems, under
-happy conditions.
-
-Any one who turns over Seymour Haden’s plates in chronological order,
-will find that though, as it chanced, a good many years had passed, yet
-very little work in etching had been done before the artist had found
-his own method and was wholly himself. There were first the six dainty
-little efforts of 1843 and 1844; then, when etching was resumed in
-1858—or, rather, when it was for the first time taken to seriously—there
-were the plates of _Arthur_, _Dasha_, _A Lady Reading_, and _Amalfi_. In
-these he was finding his way; and then, with the first plates of the
-following year, his way was found; we have the _Mytton Hall_, the
-_Egham_, and the _Water Meadow_, perfectly vigorous, perfectly
-suggestive sketches, still unsurpassed. In later years we find a later
-manner, a different phase of his talent, a different result of his
-experience; but in 1859 he was already, I repeat, entirely himself, and
-doing work that is neither strikingly better nor strikingly worse than
-the work which has followed it a score of years after. In the work of
-1859, and in the work of the last period, there will be found about an
-equal measure of beautiful production. In each there will be something
-to admire warmly, and something that will leave us indifferent. And in
-the etchings of 1859, in the very plates that I have mentioned, there is
-already enough to attest the range of the artist’s sympathy with nature
-and with picturesque effect. _Mytton Hall_, seen or guessed at through
-the gloom of its weird trees, is remarkable for a certain garden
-stateliness—a disorder that began in order, a certain dignity of nature
-in accord with the curious dignity and quietude of Art. The _Egham_
-subject has the silence of the open country; the _Water Meadow_ is an
-artist’s subject quite as peculiarly, for “the eye that sees” is
-required most of all when the question is how to find the beautiful in
-the apparently commonplace.
-
-Next year, amongst other good work, we have the sweet little plate of
-_Combe Bottom_, which, in a fine impression, more than holds its own
-against the _Kensington Gardens_, and gives us at least as much
-enjoyment by its excellence of touch as does the more intricate beauty
-of the _Shore Mill Pond_, with its foliage so varied and so rich. In the
-next year to which any etchings are assigned in Sir William Drake’s
-catalogue—a thoroughly systematic book, and done with the aid of much
-information from the author of the plates—we find Mr. Haden departing
-from his usual habit of recording his impression of nature, for the
-object, sometimes not a whit less worthy, of recording his impression of
-some chosen piece of master’s art. This is in the year 1865, and the
-subject is a rendering of Turner’s drawing of the _Grande Chartreuse_,
-and it is an instance of the noble and artistic translation of work to
-which a translator may hold himself bound to be faithful. And here is
-the proper place, I think, to mention the one such other instance of a
-subject inspired, not by nature, but by the art of Turner, which Seymour
-Haden’s work affords—the large plate of the _Calais Pier_, done in 1874.
-Nothing shows Mr. Haden’s sweep of hand, his masculine command of his
-means, better than that. Such an exhibition of spontaneous force is
-altogether refreshing. One or two points about it demand to be noted. In
-the first place, it makes no pretence, and exhibits no desire, to be a
-pure copy. Without throwing any imputation on the admirable craft of the
-pure interpreter and simple reproducer who enables us to enjoy so much
-of an art that might otherwise never come near to many of us, I may yet
-safely say that I feel sure that Mr. Haden had never the faintest
-intention of performing for the _Calais Pier_ this copyist’s service. To
-him the _Calais Pier_ of Turner—the sombre earlyish work of the master,
-now hanging in the National Gallery—was as a real scene. It was not to
-be scrupulously imitated; what was to be realised, or what was to be
-suggested, was the impression that it made. With a force of expression
-peculiar to him, Seymour Haden has succeeded in this aim; but, I think,
-he has succeeded best in the rare unpublished state which he knows as
-the “first biting,” and next best in the second state—the first state
-having some mischief of its own to bear which in the preparatory proofs
-had not arisen, and in the second state had ceased. The plate is
-arranged now with a ground for mezzotint—it lies awaiting that work—and
-if Mr. Haden, having now retraced to the full such steps as may have
-been at least partially mistaken, is but master of the new method—can
-but apply the mezzotint with anything of that curious facility and
-success with which Turner applied it to a few of his plates in _Liber
-Studiorum_, in which the professional engraver had no part—then we shall
-have a _chef-d’œuvre_ of masculine suggestion which will have been worth
-waiting for.
-
-To go back to the somewhat earlier plates. The _Penton Hook_, which is
-one of many wrought in 1864, is another instance—and we have had several
-already—of the artist’s singular power in the suggestion of tree form.
-Of actual leafage, leafage in detail, he is a less successful
-interpreter, as is indeed only natural in an etcher devoted on the whole
-to broad effects, looking resolutely at the _ensemble_. Detail is
-nothing to him—_ensemble_, balance, is all. But the features of trees,
-as growth of trunk and bend of bough reveal them, he gives to us as no
-other contemporary etcher can. And in old Art they are less varied in
-Claude and in Ruysdael. Mere leafage counted for more with both of
-these. And if it is too much to compare Mr. Haden as a draughtsman of
-the tree with a master of painting so approved as Crome—the painter
-especially of oak and willow—as an etcher of the tree he may yet be
-invited to occupy no second place, for Crome’s rare etchings are
-remarkable for draughtsmanship chiefly. Crome knew little of technical
-processes in etching, and so no full justice can ever be done to his
-etched work, which passed, imperfect, out of his own hands, and was then
-spoilt in the hands of others—dull, friendly people, who fancied they
-knew more than he did of the trick of the craft, but who knew nothing of
-the instinct of the art. Crome himself in etching was like a soldier
-unequipped. Mr. Haden has a whole armoury of weapons.
-
-Seymour Haden has been a fisherman; I do not know whether he has been a
-sailor. But, at all events, purely rural life and scene, however varied
-in kind, are discovered to be insufficient, and the foliage of the
-meadow and the waters of the trout stream are often left for the great
-sweep of tidal river, the long banks that enclose it, the wide sky that
-enlivens every great flat land, and by its infinite mobility and
-immeasurable light gives a soul, I always think, to the scenery of the
-plain. Then we have _Sunset on the Thames_ (1865), _Erith Marshes_
-(1865), and the _Breaking Up of the Agamemnon_ (1870), the last of them
-striking a deep poetic note—that of our associations with an England of
-the past that has allowed us the England of to-day—a note struck by
-Turner in the _Fighting Téméraire_, and struck so magnificently by
-Browning and by Tennyson[1] in verse for which no Englishman can ever be
-too thankful.
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- I mean, of course, in “Home Thoughts from Abroad,” and in the
- “Revenge: a Ballad of the Fleet.”
-
-In the technique of these later etchings there is, perhaps, no very
-noticeable departure from that of the earlier but yet mature work. But
-in composition or disposition of form we seem to see an increasing love
-of the sense of spaciousness, breadth, potent effect. The work seems, in
-these best examples, to become more dramatic and more moving. The hand
-demands occasion for the large exercise of its freedom. These
-characteristics are very noticeable in the _Sawley Abbey_ of 1873. Nor
-are they absent from our _Dusty Millers_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-_Sawley Abbey_ is etched on zinc, a substance of which Mr. Haden has of
-late become fond. It affords “a fat line”—a line without rigidity—and so
-far it is good. But the practical difficulty with it is that the
-particles of iron it contains make it uncertain and tricky, and we may
-notice that an etching on zinc is apt to be full of spots and dots. It
-succeeds admirably, however, where it does not fail very much. Of course
-its frequent failure places it out of the range of the pure copyist who
-copies or translates as matter of business. He cannot afford its risk.
-In 1877—a year in which Mr. Haden made a number of somewhat undesirable
-etchings in Spain, and a more welcome group of sketches in Dorsetshire,
-on the downs and the coast—Mr. Haden worked much upon zinc. And it is in
-this year that a change that might before have been foreseen is clearly
-apparent. Dry point before this had been united with etching, but not
-till now have we much of what is wholly dry point; and from this date
-the dry-point work is almost, though not altogether, continuous, the
-artist having rejoiced, he tells me, in its freedom and rapidity.
-
-The Dorsetshire etchings, _Windmill Hill_, _Nine Barrow Down_, and the
-like, are most of them dry points. In them, though the treatment of
-delicate distances is not evaded, there is especial opportunity for
-strong and broad effects of light and shade. Perhaps it is to these that
-a man travels as his work continues, and as, in continuing, it develops.
-At least it may be so in landscape.
-
-Here, for the present, is arrested the etched work of an artist
-thoroughly individual, thoroughly vigorous, but against whom I have
-charged, by implication, sometimes a lack of exquisiteness, the only too
-frequent but not inevitable drawback of the quality of force. So much
-for the work of the hand. For the process of the mind—the character
-which sets the hand upon the labour, and pricks it on to the execution
-of the aim—the worst has been said also, when I said, at the beginning,
-that Mr. Haden lacked that power of extremely prolonged concentration
-which produced the epic in literature and the epic in painting. These
-two admissions made, there is little of just criticism of Seymour
-Haden’s work that must not be admiring and cordial—the record of
-enjoyment rather than of dissatisfaction—so much faithful and free
-suggestion does the work contain of the impressions that gave rise to
-it, so much variety is compassed, so much are we led into unbroken
-paths, and so much evidence is there of eager desire to enlarge the
-limits of our Art, whether by plunge into a new theme, or by application
-of a new process.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- JULES JACQUEMART.
-
-
-THERE died, in September, 1880, at his mother’s house in the high road
-between the Arc de Triomphe and the Bois, a unique artist whose death
-was for the most part unobserved by the frequenters of picture
-galleries. He had contributed but little to picture galleries. There had
-not been given to Jules Jacquemart the pleasure of a very wide
-notoriety, but in many ways he was happy, in many fortunate. He was
-fortunate, to begin with, in his birth; for though he was born in the
-_bourgeoisie_, it was in the cultivated _bourgeoisie_, and it was in the
-_bourgeoisie_ of France. His father, Albert Jacquemart, the known
-historian of pottery and porcelain, and of ancient and fine furniture,
-was of course a faithful and diligent lover of beautiful things, so that
-Jules Jacquemart was reared in a house where little was ugly and much
-was precious; a house organized, albeit unconsciously, on William
-Morris’s admirable plan, “Have nothing in your home that you do not know
-to be useful or believe to be beautiful.” Thus his own natural
-sensitiveness, which he had inherited, was highly cultivated from the
-first. From the first he breathed the liberal and refining air of Art.
-He was happy in the fact that adequate fortune gave him the liberty, in
-health, of choosing his work, and in sickness, of taking his rest. With
-comparatively rare exceptions, he did precisely the things which he was
-fitted to do, and did them perfectly, and being ill when he had done
-them, he betook himself to the exquisite South, where colour is, and
-light—the things we long for the most when we are most tired in
-cities—and so there came to him towards the end a surprise of pleasure
-in so beautiful a world. He was happy in being surrounded all his life
-long by passionate affection in the narrow circle of his home. His
-mother survives him—the experience of bereavement being hers, when it
-would naturally have been his. For himself, he was happier than she, for
-he had never suffered any quite irreparable loss. And in one other way
-he was probably happy—in that he died in middle age, his work being
-entirely done. The years of deterioration and of decay, in which first
-the artist does but dully reproduce the spontaneous work of his youth,
-and then is sterile altogether—the years in which he is no longer the
-fashion at all, but only the landmark or the finger-post of a fashion
-that is past—the years when a name once familiar is uttered at rare
-intervals and in tones of apology as the name of one whose performance
-has never quite equalled the promise he had aforetime given—these years
-never came to Jules Jacquemart. He was spared these years.
-
-But few people care, or are likely to care very much, for the things
-which chiefly interested him, and which he reproduced in his art; and
-even the care for these things, where it does exist, does,
-unfortunately, by no means imply the power to appreciate the art by
-which they are retained and diffused. “Still-life,” using the expression
-in its broadest sense—the pourtrayal of objects, natural or artificial,
-for the objects’ sake, and not as background or accessory—has never been
-rated very highly or very widely loved. Here and there a professed
-connoisseur has had pleasure from some piece of exquisite workmanship; a
-rich man has looked with idly caressing eye upon the skilful record of
-his gold plate or of the grapes of his forcing-house. There has been
-praise for the adroit Dutchmen, and for Lance and Blaise Desgoffe. But
-the public generally—save perhaps in the case of William Hunt, his
-birds’ nests and his primroses—has been indifferent to these things, and
-often the public has been right in its indifference, for often these
-things are done in a poor spirit, a spirit of servile imitation or
-servile flattery, with which Art has nothing to do. But there are
-exceptions, and there is a better way of looking at these things.
-William Hunt was often one of these exceptions; Chardin was always—save
-in a rare instance or so of dull pomposity of rendering—Jules
-Jacquemart, take him for all in all, was of these exceptions the most
-brilliant and the most peculiar. He, in his best art of etching, and his
-fellows and forerunners in the art of painting, have done something to
-endow the beholders of their work with a new sense, with the capacity
-for new experiences of enjoyment—they have pourtrayed not so much matter
-as the very soul of matter. They have put matter in its finest light: it
-has got new dignity. Chardin did this with his peaches, his pears, his
-big coarse bottles, his copper saucepans, his silk-lined caskets. Jules
-Jacquemart did it—we shall see in more of detail presently—very
-specially with the finer work of artistic men in household matter and
-ornament; with his blue and white porcelain, with his polished steel of
-chased armour and sword-blade, with his Renaissance mirrors, with his
-precious vessels of crystal and jade and jasper. But when he was most
-fully himself, his work most characteristic and individual, he shut
-himself off from popularity. Even untrained observers could accept the
-agile engraver as an interpreter of other men’s pictures—of Meissonier’s
-inventions, or Van der Meer’s, or Greuze’s—but they could not accept him
-as the interpreter at first hand of the treasures which were so
-peculiarly his own that he may almost be said to have discovered them
-and their beauty. They were not alive to the wonders that have been done
-in the world by the hands of artistic men. How could they be alive to
-the wonders of this their reproduction—their translation, rather, and a
-very free and personal one—into the subtle lines, the graduated darks,
-the soft or sparkling lights, of the artist in etching?
-
-On September 7th, 1837, Jacquemart was born, in Paris, and the
-profession of Art, in one or other of its branches, came naturally to a
-man of his race. A short period of practice in draughtsmanship, and only
-a small experience of the particular business of etching, sufficed to
-make him a master. As time proceeded, he of course developed; he found
-new methods—ways not previously known to him. But little of what is
-obviously tentative and immature is to be noticed even in his earliest
-work. He springs into his art an artist fully armed, like Rembrandt with
-the wonderful portrait of his mother “lightly etched.” In 1860, when he
-is but twenty-three, he is at work upon the illustrations to his
-father’s _Histoire de la Porcelaine_, and though in that publication the
-absolute realisation of wonderful matter is not, perhaps, so noteworthy
-as in the _Gemmes et Joyaux de la Couronne_—the touch is not so large,
-so energetic, and so free—there is evident already the hand of the
-delicate artist and the eye that can appreciate and render almost
-unconsidered beauties. Exquisite matter and the forms that Art has given
-to common things have found their new interpreter. The _Histoire de la
-Porcelaine_ contains twenty-six plates, most of which are devoted to
-Oriental china, of which the elder Jacquemart possessed a magnificent
-collection at a time when the popular rage for “blue and white” was
-still unpronounced. Many of Albert Jacquemart’s pieces figure in the
-book; they were pieces the son had lived with and which he knew
-familiarly. Their charm, their delicacy, he perfectly represented, and
-of each individual piece he appreciated the characteristics, passing
-too, without sense of difficulty, from the _bizarre_ ornamentation of
-the East to the ordered forms and satisfying symmetry which the high
-taste of the Renaissance gave to its products. Thus, in the _Histoire de
-la Porcelaine_, amongst the quaintly naturalistic decorations from
-China, and amongst the ornaments of Sèvres, with their pretty boudoir
-graces and airs of light luxury fit for the Marquise of Louis Quinze and
-the sleek young _abbé_, her pet and her counsellor, we find, rendered
-with just as thorough an appreciation, a _Brocca Italienne_, the Brocca
-of the Medicis, of the sixteenth century, slight and tall, where the
-lightest of Renaissance forms, the thin and reed-like lines of the
-_arabesque_—no mass or splash of colour—is patterned with measured
-exactitude, with rhythmic completeness, over the smoothish surface. It
-is wonderful how little work there is in the etching, and how much is
-suggested. The actual touches are almost as few as those which
-Jacquemart employed afterwards in some of his light effects of
-rock-crystal, the material which he has interpreted perhaps best of all.
-One counts the touches, and one sees how soon and how strangely he has
-got the power of suggesting all that he does not actually give, of
-suggesting all that is in the object by the little that is in the
-etching. On such work may be bestowed, amongst much other praise, that
-particular praise which, to fashionable French criticism, delighted
-especially with the feats of adroitness, and occupied with the evidence
-of the artist’s dexterity, seems the highest—_Il n’y a rien, et il y a
-tout._
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Execution so brilliant can hardly also be faultless, and without
-mentioning many instances among his earlier work, where the defect is
-chiefly noticeable, it may be said that the roundness of round objects
-is more than once missing in his etchings. Strange that the very quality
-first taught to, and first acquired by, the most ordinary pupil of a
-Government School of Art should have been wanting to an artist often as
-adroit in his methods as he was individual in his vision! The _Vase de
-Vieux Vincennes_, from the collection of M. Léopold Double, is a case to
-the point. It has the variety of tone, the seeming fragility of texture
-and ornament, the infinity of decoration, the rendering of the subtle
-curvature of a flower, and of the transparency of the wing of a passing
-insect. It has everything but the roundness—everything but the quality
-that is the easiest and the most common. But so curious a deficiency,
-occasionally displayed, could not weigh against the amazing evidence of
-various cleverness, and Jacquemart was shortly engaged by the publishers
-and engaged by the French Government.
-
-The difference in the commissions accorded by those two—the intelligent
-service which the one was able to render to the nation in the act of
-setting the artist about his appropriate work, and, broadly speaking,
-the hindrance which the other opposed to his individual
-development—could nowhere go unnoticed, and least of all could go
-unnoticed in a land like ours, too full of a dull pride in _laissez
-faire_, in private enterprise, in Government inaction. To the initiative
-of the Imperial Government, as Mr. Hamerton well pointed out when he was
-appreciating Jacquemart as long as twelve years ago, was due the
-undertaking by the artist of the colossal task, by the fulfilment of
-which he secured his fame. Moreover, if the Imperial Government had not
-been there to do this thing, this thing would never have been done, and
-some of the noblest and most intricate objects of Art in the possession
-of the State would have gone unrecorded—their beauty unknown and
-undiffused. Even as it is, though the task definitely commissioned was
-brought to its proper end, a desirable sequel that had been planned
-remained untouched. The hand that recorded the ordered grace of
-Renaissance ornament would have shown as well as any the intentions of
-more modern craftsmen—the decoration of the Eighteenth Century in
-France, with its light and luxurious elegance.
-
-The _Histoire de la Porcelaine_, then—begun in 1860, and published in
-1862 by Techener, a steady friend of Jacquemart—was followed in 1864 by
-the _Gemmes et Joyaux de la Couronne_. The _Chalcographie_ of the
-Louvre—the department which concerns itself with the issue of
-commissioned prints—undertook the publication of the _Gemmes et Joyaux_.
-In the series there were sixty subjects, or at least sixty plates, for
-sometimes Jacquemart, seated by his window in the Louvre (which is
-reflected over and over again at every angle in the lustre of the
-objects he designed), would etch in one plate the portraits of two
-treasures, glad to give “value” to the virtues of the one by
-juxtaposition with the virtues of the other; to oppose, say, the
-brilliant transparency of the rock-crystal ball to the texture, sombre
-and velvety, of the vase of ancient sardonyx. Of all these plates M.
-Louis Gonse has given an account, sufficiently detailed for most
-people’s purposes, in the _Gazette des Beaux-Arts_ for 1876. The
-catalogue of Jacquemart’s etchings there contained was a work of
-industry and of very genuine interest on M. Gonse’s part, and its
-necessary extent, due to the artist’s own prodigious diligence in work,
-sufficiently excuses, for the time at least, an occasional
-incompleteness of description, making absolute identification sometimes
-a difficult matter. The critical appreciation was warm and intelligent,
-and the student of Jacquemart must always be indebted to Gonse. But for
-the quite adequate description of work like Jacquemart’s, there was
-needed not only the French tongue—the tongue of criticism—but a Gautier
-to use it. Only a critic whose intelligence gave form and definiteness
-to the impressions of senses preternaturally acute, could have given
-quite adequate expression to Jacquemart’s dealings with beautiful
-matter—to his easy revelry of colour and light over lines and contours
-of selected beauty. Everything that Jacquemart could do in the rendering
-of beautiful matter, and of its artistic and appropriate ornament, is
-represented in one or other of the varied subjects of the _Gemmes et
-Joyaux_, save only his work with delicate china. And the work represents
-his strength, and hardly ever betrays his weakness. He was never a
-thoroughly trained academical draughtsman. A large and detailed
-treatment of the nude figure—any further treatment of it than that
-required for the beautiful suggestion of it as it occurs on Renaissance
-mirror-frames or in Renaissance porcelains—might have found him
-deficient. He had a wonderful feeling for the unbroken flow of its line,
-for its suppleness, for the figure’s harmonious movement. Perhaps he was
-not the master of its most intricate anatomy; but, on the scale on which
-he had to treat it, his suggestion was faultless. By the brief shorthand
-of his art in this matter, we are brought back to the old formula of
-praise. Here, indeed, if anywhere—_Il n’y a rien, et il y a tout._
-
-And as nothing in his etchings is more adroit than his treatment of the
-figure, so nothing is more delightful, and, as it were, unexpected. He
-feels the intricate unity of its curve and flow, how it gives value by
-its happy accidents of line to the fixed and invariable ornament of
-Renaissance decoration—an ornament as orderly as well-observed verse,
-with its settled form, its repetition, its refrain. I will mention two
-or three instances which seem the most notable. One of them occurs in
-the drawing of a Renaissance mirror—_Miroir Français du Seizième
-Siècle_—elaborately carved, but its chief grace, after all, is in its
-fine proportions; not so much in the perfection of the ornament as in
-the perfect disposition of it. The absolutely satisfactory filling of a
-given space with the enrichments of design, the occupation of the space
-without the crowding of it—for that is what is meant by the perfect
-disposition of ornament—has always been the problem for the decorative
-artist. Recent fashion has insisted, quite sufficiently, that it has
-been best solved by the Japanese; and they indeed have solved it, and
-sometimes with a singular economy of means, suggesting rather than
-achieving the occupation of the space they have worked upon. But the
-best Renaissance design has solved the problem quite as well, in
-fashions less arbitrary, with rhythm more pronounced, and yet more
-subtle, with a precision more exquisite, with a complete comprehension
-of the value of quietude, of the importance of rest. If it requires “an
-Athenian tribunal” to understand Ingres and Flaxman, it needs, at all
-events, some education in beautiful line to understand the art of
-Renaissance ornament. Such art Jacquemart of course understood
-absolutely, and against its ordered lines the free play of the nude
-figure is indicated with touches dainty, faultless, and few. Thus it is,
-I say, in the _Miroir Français du Seizième Siècle_. And to the
-attraction of the figure has been added almost the attraction of
-landscape and landscape atmosphere in the plate No. 27 of the _Gemmes et
-Joyaux_, representing scenes from Ovid, as an artist of the Renaissance
-had pourtrayed them on the delicate liquid surface of _cristal de
-roche_. And, not confining our examination wholly to the _Gemmes et
-Joyaux_—of which obviously the mirror just spoken of cannot form a
-part—we observe there or elsewhere in Jacquemart’s work how his
-treatment of the figure takes constant note of the material in which the
-first artist, his original, was working. Is it raised porcelain, for
-instance, or soft ivory, or smooth cold bronze, with its less close and
-subtle following of the figure’s curves, its certain measure of
-angularity in limb and trunk, its many facets, with somewhat marked
-transition from one to the other (instead of the unbroken harmony of the
-real figure), its occasional flatnesses? If it is this, this is what
-Jacquemart gives us in his etchings—not the figure only, but the figure
-as it comes to us through the medium of bronze. See, for instance, the
-_Vénus Marine_, lying half extended, with slender legs, long a
-possession of M. Thiers, I believe. You cannot insist too much on
-Jacquemart’s mastery over his material—_cloisonné_, with its many low
-tones, its delicate patterning outlined by metal ribs; the coarseness of
-rough wood, as in the _Salière de Troyes_; the sharp clear sword-blade,
-as the sword of François Premier, the signet’s flatness and delicate
-smoothness—_C’est le sinet du Roy Sant Louis_—and the red porphyry,
-flaked, as it were, and speckled, of an ancient vase, and the clear soft
-unctuous green of jade.
-
-And as the material is marvellously varied, so are its combinations
-curious and wayward. I saw, one autumn, at Lyons, the sombre little
-church of Ainay, a Christian edifice built of no Gothic stones, but
-placed, already ages ago, on the site of a Roman temple—the temple used,
-its dark columns cut across, its black stones rearranged, and so the
-church completed—Antiquity pressed into the service of the Middle Age.
-Jacquemart, dealing with the precious objects he had to pourtray, came
-often upon such strange meetings: an antique vase of sardonyx, say,
-infinitely precious, mounted and altered in the twelfth century for the
-service of the Mass, and so, beset with gold and jewels, offered by its
-possessor to the Abbey of Saint Denis.
-
-It was not a literal imitation, it must be said again, that Jacquemart
-made of these things. These things sat to him for their portraits; he
-posed them; he composed them aright. Placed by him in their best lights,
-they revealed their finest qualities. He loved an effective contrast of
-them, a comely juxtaposition; a legitimate accessory he could not
-neglect—that window, by which he sat as he worked, flashed its light
-upon a surface that caught its reflection; in so many different ways the
-simple expedient helps the task, gives the object roundness, betrays its
-lustre. Some people bore hardly on him for the colour, warmth, and life
-he introduced into his etchings. They wanted a colder, a more
-impersonal, a more precise record. Jacquemart never sacrificed precision
-when precision was of the essence of the business, but he did not care
-for it for its own sake. And the thing that his first critics blamed him
-for doing—the composition of his subject, the rejection of this, the
-choice of that, the bestowal of fire and life upon matter dead to the
-common eye—is a thing which artists in all Arts have always done, and
-will always continue to do, and for this most simple reason, that the
-doing of it is Art.
-
-Not very long after the _Gemmes et Joyaux_ was issued, as we now have
-it, the life of Frenchmen was upset by the war. Schemes of work waited
-or were abandoned; at last men began, as a distinguished Frenchman at
-that time wrote to me, “to rebuild their existence out of the ruins of
-the past.” In 1873, Jacquemart, for his part, was at work again on his
-own best work of etching. The _Histoire de la Céramique_, a companion to
-the _Histoire de la Porcelaine_, was published in that year. To an
-earlier period (to 1868) belong the two exquisite plates of the light
-porcelain of Valenciennes, executed for Dr. Le Jeal’s monograph on the
-history of that fabric. And to 1866 belongs an etching already
-familiarly known to the readers of the _Gazette des Beaux-Arts_ and to
-possessors of the first edition of _Etching and Etchers_—the Tripod—a
-priceless thing of jasper, set in golden carvings by Gouthière, and now
-lodged among the best treasures of the great house in Manchester Square.
-
-But it is useless to continue further the chronicle of the triumphs that
-Jacquemart won in the translation, in his own free fashion of black and
-white, of all sorts of beautiful matter. Moreover, in 1873, the year of
-the issue of his last important series of plates, Jules Jacquemart,
-stationed at Vienna, as one of the jury of the International Exhibition
-there, caught a serious illness, a fever of the typhoid kind, and this
-left him a delicacy which he could never overcome; and thenceforth his
-work was limited. Where it was not a weariness, it had to be little but
-a recreation, a comparative pause. That was the origin of his
-performances in water colour, undertaken in the South, whither he
-repaired at each approach of winter. There remains, then, only to speak
-of these drawings and of such of his etched work as consisted in the
-popularisation of painted pictures. As a copyist of famous canvasses he
-found remunerative and sometimes fame-producing labour.
-
-As an interpreter of other men’s pictures, it fell to the lot of
-Jacquemart, as it generally falls to the lot of professional engravers,
-to engrave the most different masters. But with so very personal an
-artist as he, the interpretation of so many men, and in so many years,
-from 1860, or thereabouts, onwards, could not possibly be always of
-equal value. Once or twice he was very strong in the reproduction of the
-Dutch portrait painters; but as far as Dutch painting is concerned, he
-is strongest of all when he interprets, as in one now celebrated
-etching, Jan van der Meer of Delft. _Der Soldat und das lachende
-Mädchen_ was one of the most noteworthy pieces in the rich cabinet of M.
-Léopold Double. The big and somewhat blustering trooper common in Dutch
-Art, sits here engaging the attention of that pointed-faced, subtle, but
-vivacious maiden peculiar to Van der Meer. Behind the two, who are
-occupied in contented gazing and contented talk, is the bare sunlit
-wall, spread only with its map or chart—the Dutchman made his wall as
-instructive as Joseph Surface made his screen—and by the side of the
-couple, throwing its brilliant, yet modulated light on the woman’s face
-and on the background, is the intricately patterned window, the airy
-lattice. Rarely was a master’s subject or a master’s method better
-interpreted than in this print. Frans Hals once or twice is just as
-characteristically rendered. But with these exceptions it is
-Jacquemart’s own fellow-countrymen whom he renders the best. Seldom was
-finish so free from pettiness or the evidence of effort as it is in the
-_Défilé des populations lorraines devant l’Impératrice à Nancy_. _Le
-Liseur_ is even finer—Meissonier again; this time a solitary figure,
-with bright, soft light from window at the side, as in the Van der Meer
-of Delft. The suppleness of Jacquemart’s talent—the happy speed of it,
-rather than its patient elaboration—is shown by his renderings of
-Greuze, the _Rêve d’amour_, a single head, and _L’Orage_, a sketchy
-picture of a young and frightened mother kneeling by her child exposed
-to the storm. Greuze, with his cajoling art—which, if one likes, one
-must like without respecting—is entirely there. So, too, Fragonard, the
-whole ardent and voluptuous soul of him, in _Le Premier Baiser_. Labour
-it is possible to give in much greater abundance; but intelligence in
-interpretation cannot go any further or do anything more.
-
-Between the etchings of Jacquemart and his water-colour drawings there
-is little affinity. The subjects of the one hardly ever recall the
-subjects of the other. The etchings and the water colours have but one
-thing in common—an extraordinary lightness of hand. Once, however, the
-theme is the same. Jacquemart etched some compositions of flowers; M.
-Gonse has praised them very highly: to me, elegant as they are, fragile
-of substance and dainty of arrangement, they seem inferior to that
-last-century flower-piece which we English are fortunate enough to know
-through the exquisite mezzotint of Earlom. But in the occasional
-water-colour painting of flowers—especially in the decorative
-disposition of them over a surface for ornament—Jacquemart is not easily
-surpassed; the lightness and suggestiveness of the work are almost equal
-to Fantin’s. A painted fan by Jacquemart, which is retained by M. Petit,
-the dealer, is dexterous, yet simple in the highest degree. The theme is
-a bough of the apple-tree, where the blossom is pink, white, whiter,
-then whitest against the air at the branch’s end.
-
-But generally his water colour is of landscape, and a record of the
-South. Perhaps it is the sunlit and flower-bearing coast, his own refuge
-in winter weather. Perhaps, as in a drawing of M. May’s, it is the
-mountains behind Mentone—their conformation, colours, and tones, and
-their thin wreaths of mist—a drawing which M. May, himself an habitual
-mountaineer in those regions, assures me is of the most absolute truth.
-Or, perhaps, as in another drawing in the same collection, it is a view
-of _Marseilles_; sketchy at first sight, yet with nothing unachieved
-that might have helped the effect; not the Marseilles, sunny and
-brilliant, parched and southern, of most men’s observation—the
-Marseilles even of the great observer, the Marseilles of _Little
-Dorrit_—but the busy port, with its ever-shifting life, under an effect
-less known; the Marseilles of an overcast morning: all its houses, its
-shipping and its quays, grey or green and steel-coloured. Such a work is
-a masterpiece, with the great quality of a masterpiece, that you cannot
-quickly exhaust the restrained wealth of its learned simplicity. To
-speak about it one technical word, we may say that while it belongs by
-its frank sketchiness to the earlier order of water-colour art, an art
-of rapid effect, as practised best by Dewint and David Cox, it belongs
-to the later order—to contemporary art—by its unhesitating employment of
-body colour.
-
-The true source of the diversity of Jacquemart’s efforts, which I have
-now made apparent, is perhaps to be found in a vivacity of intellect, a
-continual alertness to receive all passing impressions. That alone makes
-a variety of interests easy and even necessary. That pushes men to
-express themselves in art of every kind, and to be collectors as well as
-artists, to possess as well as to create. Jacquemart inherited the
-passion of a collector; it was a queer thing that he set himself to
-collect. He was a collector of shoe-leather; foot-gear of every sort and
-of every time. His father, Albert Jacquemart, had held that to know the
-pottery of a nation was to know its history. Jules saw many histories,
-of life and travel, and the aims of travel, in the curious objects of
-his collection. Their ugliness—what would be to most of us the extreme
-distastefulness of them—did not repel him. Nor were his attentions
-devoted chiefly to the dainty slippers of a dancer—souvenirs, at all
-events, of the art of the ballet, very saleable at fancy fairs of the
-theatrical profession. He etched his own boots, tumbled out of the worst
-cupboard in the house. He looked at them with affection—_souvenirs de
-voyage_. The harmless eccentricity brings down, for a moment, to very
-ordinary levels, this watchful and exquisite artist, so devoted
-generally to high beauty, so keen to see it.
-
-What more would he have done had the forty-three years been greatly
-prolonged, a spell of life for further work accorded, Hezekiah-like, to
-a busy labourer upon whom Death had laid its first warning hand? We
-cannot answer the question, but it must have been much, so variously
-active was his talent, so fertile his resource. As it is, what may he
-hope to live by, now that the most invariably fatal of all forms of
-consumption, the most fatal while the least suspected, _la phthisie
-laryngée_, has arrested his effort? A very gifted, a singularly agile
-and supple translator of painters’ work, he may surely be allowed to be,
-and a water-colour artist, perfectly individual, yet hardly actually
-great; his strange dexterity of hand at the service of fact, not at the
-service of imagination. He recorded nature; he did not exalt or
-interpret it. But he interpreted Art. He was alive, more than any one
-has been alive before, to all the wonders that have been wrought in the
-world by the hands of artistic men.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- J. A. M. WHISTLER
-
-
-YEARS ago James Whistler was a person of high promise: he has since been
-an artist often of agreeable and exquisite, though sometimes of
-incomplete and apparently wayward, performance. He has the misfortune to
-have been greatly known to a large public as the painter of his least
-desirable works, these having reached an easy notoriety, while the
-others have thus far too much escaped a general fame. Much of Mr.
-Whistler’s art has the interest of originality, and some of it the charm
-of beauty; and yet the measure of originality has at times been
-over-rated, through the innocent error of the budding amateur, who, in
-the earlier stage of his enlightenment, confuses the beginning with the
-end, accepts the intention for the adequate fulfilment, and exalts an
-adroit sketch into the rank of a permanent picture. _Mr. Irving as
-Philip of Spain_—three years ago at the Grosvenor—was a murky caricature
-of Velasquez; the master’s sketchiness remained, but his decisiveness
-was wanting. And in some of the _Nocturnes_ the absence, not only of
-definition, but of gradation, would point to the conclusion that they
-are but engaging sketches. In them we look in vain for all the delicate
-differences of light and hue which the scenes depicted present. Like the
-landscape art of Japan, they are harmonious decorations, and a dozen or
-so of such engaging sketches placed in the upper panels of a lofty
-apartment would afford a justifiable and welcome alternative even to
-noble tapestries or Morris wall-papers. But, on the large scale on which
-they are painted—a scale in which their well-considered sketchiness is
-carefully emphasized—it is in vain that we endeavour to receive them as
-cabinet pictures. They suffer curiously when placed against work not of
-course of petty and mechanical finish, but of patient achievement. But
-they have merits of their own; nor are their merits too common. So short
-a way have they proceeded into the complications of colour, that they
-avoid the incompatible: they avoid it cleverly; they say little to the
-mind, but they are restful to the eye, in their agreeable simplicity and
-limited suggestiveness. They are the record of impressions. So far as
-they go, they are right; nay, in one sense they are better than right,
-for they are charming.
-
-And, moreover, there is evidence enough elsewhere that Mr. Whistler,
-confined to colour alone, can produce more various and more intricate
-harmonies than those of a _Nocturne_ in silver and blue, than those of a
-_scherzo_ in blue, or than those even in that fascinating portrait of
-Mrs. Meux, in which it was not so much the face as the figure and the
-movement that came to be deftly suggested, if hardly elaborately
-expressed. A great apartment in the house of Mr. Leyland, which Mr.
-Whistler has decorated, has shown that a long and concentrated effort at
-the solution of the problems of colour is not beyond the scope of an
-artist who has rarely mastered the subtleties of the intricate human
-form. It has shown, moreover, that his solution of such problems can be
-strikingly original. As a decorative painter—as a painter of large or
-brilliant sketches—Mr. Whistler has had few superiors in any time or
-land. His skill is sometimes genius here. Why, in the Grosvenor Gallery,
-the very year in which the irrepressible painter proffered the most
-unwelcome of his _Nocturnes_, there was a quite delightful picture,
-suggested, indeed, by Japanese Art, but itself not less subtle than the
-art which prompted it—_A Variation in Flesh-colour and Green_—bare-armed
-damsels of the farthest East, lounging in attitudes of agreeable
-abandonment in some balcony or court open to the genial sunlight and to
-the soft air. The damsels—they were not altogether meritorious. The
-draughtsmanship displayed in them was anything but “searching.” But the
-picture had a quality of cool refreshment such as the gentle colour and
-clean-shining material of Luca della Robbia affords to the beholder of
-Tuscan Art, as he comes upon Tuscan Art under Tuscan skies.
-
-The interest of life—the interest of humanity—has confessedly occupied
-Mr. Whistler but little; yet in spite of his devotion to the art
-qualities of the peacock, it has not been given to him to be quite
-indifferent to the race to which he belongs. His portraits, sometimes,
-whatever may be his theories, have not been very obviously considered as
-arrangements of colour only for colour’s sake. They may even have
-profited by the adoption of hues such as suited their themes, and here
-Mr. Whistler may have delivered, through his language of colour, a
-message which some men would have intrusted to line alone. Anyhow he has
-been able to paint with admirable expressiveness a portrait of his
-mother, and to have recorded on a doleful canvas the head and figure of
-Carlyle, and in both, the simplicity and veracity of effect are things
-to be noted. Not indeed that the pictures are without mannerism: the
-straight and stiffish disposition of the lines in the first is not so
-much a merit as a peculiarity. But a certain dignified quietude and a
-certain reticent pathos are apparent in the portrait of the lady, and
-the rugged simplicity of Carlyle—a simplicity which his own generation
-received with so naive an admiration—is suggested not only with skill of
-hand, but with the mental skill that discovers quickly, in presence of a
-subject, wherein lies the best opportunity for high success in treating
-it.
-
-But I take it to be admitted by those who do not conclude that the art
-is necessarily great which has the misfortune to be unacceptable, that
-it is not by his paintings so much as by his etchings that Mr.
-Whistler’s name may aspire to live. In painting, his success is
-infrequent and it is limited—though when it occurs, its very peculiarity
-gives us a keen relish for it—in etching, it is neither limited nor
-rare, though of course it is not uninterrupted nor unbroken. In
-painting, Mr. Whistler is an impressionist—he is an impressionist in
-etching, but etching permits the record of the impression only, while
-painting demands at all events the occasional capacity to realise with
-weeks of labour what a few hours might happily enough suggest.
-Moreover—and the circumstance is odd and noteworthy—it is in his
-etchings that Mr. Whistler has reached realisation the best, and he has
-reached it, in the earlier Thames-side work of twenty years ago, with no
-sacrifice whatever of freedom and of frankness in treatment. His best
-painting betrays something of that exquisite sensitiveness, that almost
-modern sensitiveness, to pleasurable juxtapositions of delicate colour
-which we admire in Orchardson, in Linton, and in Albert Moore; it
-betrays sometimes, as in a portrait of Miss Alexander, a deftness of
-brushwork, in the wave of a feather, in the curve of a hat, that recalls
-for a moment even the great names of Velasquez and of Gainsborough; and
-of high art qualities it betrays not much besides—though these, which
-are very rare, we are properly grateful for. But the etchings—that is
-indeed another matter. They must be considered in detail. No criticism
-is wasted that concerns itself carefully with them, and that points out
-from the many, which are fair, and which are exquisite, and which are
-flagrantly offensive.
-
-In some of his prints, Mr. Whistler makes good a claim to live by the
-side of the finest masters of the etching needle, and a familiarity with
-Rembrandt and with Méryon increases rather than lessens our interest in
-the American of to-day. But Mr. Whistler has etched too much for his
-reputation, or at least has published too much. No one who can look at
-work of Art fairly, demands that it shall be faultless; least of all can
-that be demanded of work of which the very virtue lies sometimes in its
-spontaneousness; but one has good reason to demand that the faults shall
-not outweigh the merits. Now in some of Mr. Whistler’s figure-pieces,
-executed with the etching-needle, and offered to the public
-indiscreetly, the commonness and vulgarity of the person pourtrayed find
-no apology in perfection of pourtrayal—the design is uncouth, the
-drawing is intolerable, the light and shade an affair of a moment’s
-impressiveness, with no subtlety of truth to hold the interest that is
-at first aroused. See, as one instance, the etching numbered 3 in Mr.
-Thomas’s published catalogue—notice the size of the hands. And see again
-No. 56, in which the figure is one vast black triangle, in which there
-is apparently not a single quality which work of Art should have. The
-portraits of Becquet, the violoncello player, of one Mann, and of one
-Davis, have character, with no mannerism, but with a good simplicity of
-treatment. But neither face pourtrayed, nor Art pourtraying it, is of a
-kind to command a prolonged enjoyment. On the other hand, in some of the
-etchings or dry points, not, it seems, included in the catalogue, and in
-the refined and sensitive little etching of _Fanny Leyland_ there is
-apparent a distinct feeling for grace of contour—for the undulations of
-the figure and its softness of modelling. These are but the briefest
-sketches—they have a quality of their own. It is not ungenerous to
-suggest that carried further they might have failed. For the true genius
-of etching is in them as they are. As they are they have not failed.
-
-Many have been the themes which, in the art of the aquafortist, Mr.
-Whistler has essayed. He has essayed landscape; he has drawn a tree in
-_Kensington Gardens_, and a tree in the foreground of the _Isle St.
-Louis, Paris_; but that tree at least seems of no known form of
-vegetable growth—it has the air of an exploding shell. Here and
-there—occupied with those juxtapositions of light and shade which
-fascinated the masters of Holland—Mr. Whistler has drawn interiors, and
-in one of his interiors we note a success second only to the very
-highest these Dutchmen attained. This is the interior described as _The
-Kitchen_. Only the finest, the most carefully printed impressions
-possess the full charm; but when such an impression presents itself to
-the eye, the Dutch masters, who have followed most keenly the glow and
-the gradation of light on chamber-walls, are seen to be almost rivalled.
-The kitchen is a long and narrow room, at the far end of which, away
-from the window and the keen light, stand artist and spectator. Farthest
-of all from them the light vine leaves are touched in with a grace that
-Adrian van Ostade—a master in this matter—would not have excelled. By
-the embrasure of the window, just before the great thickness of the
-wall, stands a woman, angular, uncomely, of homely build, busied with
-“household chares.” In front of her comes the sharp sunlight, striking
-the thick wall-side, and lessening as it advances into the shadow and
-gloom of the humble room; wavering timidly on the plates of the dresser,
-in creeping half gleams which reveal and yet conceal the objects they
-fall upon. The meaningless scratch and scrawl of the bare floor in the
-foreground is the only fault that at all seriously tells against the
-charm of work otherwise beautiful and of keen sensitiveness; and the
-case is one in which the merit is so much the greater that the fault may
-well be ignored or its presence permitted. Again, _La Vieille aux
-Loques_—a weary woman of humblest fortunes and difficult life—shows, I
-think, that Mr. Whistler has now and then been inspired by the pathetic
-masters of Dutch Art.
-
-We have seen already that two things have much occupied Mr. Whistler—the
-arrangement of colours in their due proportions, the arrangement of
-light and shade. And the best results of the life-long study which, by
-his own account, he has given to the arrangement of colour are seen in
-the work that is purely, or the work that is practically, decorative—the
-work that escapes the responsibility of a subject. And the best results
-of the study of the arrangements of light and shade are seen in a dozen
-etchings, most of which—but not _The Kitchen_ and not the _Vieille aux
-Loques_—belong to that series in which the artist has recorded for our
-curious pleasure the common features of the shores of the Thames. Here
-also there is evident his feeling, not exactly for beauty, but at all
-events for quaintness of form, for form that has character. It had
-occurred to no one else to draw with realistic fidelity the lines of
-wharf and warehouse along the banks of the river; to note down the
-pleasant oddities of outline presented by roof and window and crane; to
-catch the changes of the grey light as it passed over the front of
-Wapping. Mr. Whistler’s figure-drawing, generally defective and always
-incomplete, has prevented him from seizing every characteristic of the
-sailor-figures that people the port. The absence, seemingly, of any
-power such as the great marine painters had, of drawing the forms of
-water, whether in a broad and wind-swept tidal river or on the high
-seas, has narrowed and limited again the means by which Mr. Whistler has
-depicted the scenes “below Bridge.” But his treatment of these scenes is
-none the less original and interesting. By wise omission, he has managed
-often to retain the sense of the flow of water or its comparative
-stillness. Its gentle lapping lifts the keels of the now emptied boats
-of his _Billingsgate_. It lies lazy under the dark warehouses of his
-_Free Trade Wharf_. It frets and flickers and divides in pleasant light
-against the woodwork of the bridge in the larger _Putney_.
-
-The limitations of Mr. Whistler’s art are very conspicuous in a more
-recent experiment than the original Thames-side series—the series of
-_Venice_. So evident, indeed, are they in that set that the set has been
-undervalued by many amateurs of taste, who have exacted too much that
-Mr. Whistler should give them, not what he was best able to see in
-Venice, but what cultivated readers of Art history have been most
-accustomed to see there. The Venice series is in the etcher’s later
-manner—a style in which ever-increasing reliance is placed on the
-faculty of slight and suggestive sketching. Now etching, even when
-practised with the greatest possible union of fidelity and freshness, is
-hardly the appropriate medium for conveying the charm of delicate
-architecture. Of such architecture Méryon himself only now and then
-essayed to give the charm, and he essayed it, deliberately, at the cost
-of abandoning not a little of the etcher’s freedom—he became, for the
-nonce at least, a “great original engraver;” he took his art beyond its
-habitual bounds. His triumph justified him. But Mr. Whistler, even in
-his earlier manhood, when those of the Thames etchings which are the
-fullest of detail were wrought with sureness and precision of hand,
-never betrayed either the capacity or the will to reproduce the charm of
-delicate architecture. Yet in an art to which colour is denied, the
-charm of delicate architecture must be the charm of Venice. It remained,
-however, for Mr. Whistler to see whether the place had yet some aspects
-which his etching could record—an impression, not a reproduction: that
-was all that could be looked for. And Mr. Whistler etched his
-impressions with curious uncertainty and curious inequality. He was now
-adroit, now wavering. He took from London to Venice his happy fashion of
-suggesting lapping water. He looked at Venice as a whole, keenly,
-delicately, but never in detail—we had bird’s-eye views of it. It had
-been interesting to wonder what would be the vision granted to a
-fantastic genius of a fantastic city. Well, little new came of it, in
-etching—nothing new that was beautiful. Afterwards, in a series of
-pastels, it became clear who it was that had seen Venice. It was Mr.
-Whistler the exquisite colourist, not the exquisite etcher.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Mr. Whistler’s fame as an aquafortist, then, rests chiefly still on his
-Thames-side work; and, even there, less on the faint agreeable sketches
-done of later years, though these have their charm, like the better of
-his painted _Nocturnes_, than on the work of his first maturity. The
-_London Bridge_ and the _Free Trade Wharf_ and one or two _Putneys_—one
-of them is in this book—may be named, however, among the happiest
-examples of the later art that is specially brief in recording an
-impression. The spring of the great arch in _London Bridge_, as seen
-from below, from the water-side, is rendered, it seems, with a
-suggestion of power in great constructive work, such as is little
-visible in the tender handling of so many of the prints of the river.
-The _Free Trade Wharf_ is a very exquisite study of gradations of tone
-and of the receding line of murky buildings that follows the bend of the
-stream. It is, in its best printed impressions, a thing of faultless
-delicacy. A third river-piece, not lately done, has been rather lately
-retouched—the _Billingsgate: Boats at a Mooring_. In the retouch is an
-instance of the successful treatment of a second “state” or even a later
-“state” of the plate, and such as should be a warning to the collector
-who buys “first states” of everything—the _Liber Studiorum_ included—and
-“first states” alone, with dull determination. Of course the true
-collector knows better: he knows that the impression is almost all, and
-the “state” next to nothing, except as indicating what is probable as to
-the condition of the plate, and he must gradually and painfully acquire
-the eye to judge of the impression.
-
-A few years ago Mr. Whistler retouched his _Billingsgate_ for the
-proprietors of the _Portfolio_, and the proof impressions of the state
-issued by them reach the highest excellence of which the plate has been
-capable. Not sheltering itself under the extreme simplicity and
-singleness of aim kept so adroitly in the _Free Trade Wharf_ and in the
-_London Bridge_, it falls into faults which these avoid. The ghostliness
-of the foreground figures demands an ingenious theory for its
-justification, and this theory no one has advanced. But the solidity of
-the buildings introduced into this plate—the clock-tower and the houses
-upon the quay—are a rare achievement in etching. For once the houses are
-not drawn, but built, like the houses and the churches and the bridges
-of Méryon. The strength of their realisation lends delicacy to the
-thin-masted fishing boats with their yet thinner lines of cordage, and
-to the distant bridge in the grey mist of London, and to the faint
-clouds of the sky. Perhaps yet more delicate than the _Billingsgate_ is
-the _Hungerford Bridge_, so small, yet, in a fine proof, so spacious and
-airy. It lacks substance, of course, and solidity—and so does the
-impression of landscape in a dream.
-
-Finally, there are the _Thames Police_, the _Tyzack Whiteley_, and the
-_Black Lion Wharf_. These, which were executed a score of years since,
-are the most varied and complete studies of quaint places now
-disappearing—nay, many of them already disappeared—of places with no
-beauty that is very old or very graceful, but with interest to the
-every-day Londoner and interest, too, to the artist. Here are small
-warehouses falling to pieces, or poorly propped even when they were
-sketched, and vanished now to make room for a vaster and duller
-uniformity of storehouse front. Here are narrow dwelling-houses of our
-Georgian days, with here a timber facing and there a quaint bow window,
-many-paned—narrow houses of sea-captains, or the riverside tradesfolk,
-or of custom-house officials, the upper classes of the Docks and the
-East-end. These too have been pressed out of the way by the aggressions
-of great commerce, and the varied line that they presented has ceased to
-be. Of all these riverside features, _Thames Police_ is an illustration
-interesting to-day and valuable to-morrow. And _Black Lion Wharf_ is yet
-fuller of happy accident of outline and happy gradation of tone, studied
-amongst common things which escape the common eye.
-
-It is a pleasure to possess such faithful and spirited records of a
-departing quaintness, and it is an achievement to have made them. It
-would be a pity to remove the grace from the achievement by insisting
-that, as in _Nocturne_ and _Arrangement_, the art was burdened by a here
-unnecessary theory; that the study of the “arrangement of line and form”
-was all, and the interest of the association nothing. When Dickens was
-tracing the fortunes of Quilp on Tower Hill, and on that dreary night
-when the little monster fell from the wharf into the river, he did not
-think only of the cadence of his sentences, or his work would never have
-lived, or lived only with the lovers of curious patchwork of mere words.
-Perhaps, without his knowing it, some slight imaginative interest in the
-lives of Londoners prompted Mr. Whistler, or strengthened his hand, as
-he recorded the shabbiness that has a history, the slums of the eastern
-suburb, and the prosaic service of the Thames. Here, and often
-elsewhere, his work, if it has shown some faults to be forgiven, has
-shown, in excellence, qualities that fascinate. The Future will forget
-his failures, to which in the Present there has somehow been accorded,
-through the activity of friendship or the activity of enmity, a
-publicity rarely bestowed upon failures at all; but it will remember the
-success of work that is peculiar and personal. These best things we have
-dwelt upon are not to be denied that length of days which is the portion
-of exquisite Art.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- ALPHONSE LEGROS.
-
-
-ANY generation since the brilliant times of Art—since the sixteenth
-century in Italy, the seventeenth in Holland, the eighteenth in England
-and in France—has had to deem itself fortunate if it has produced three
-or four artists of individuality united with large attainment; and it is
-much to be surmised that no generation will have greater cause than our
-own to think it has done well if it has produced even as many.
-Notorieties of the moment may always be counted by the score, but fame
-remains so rarely for the most popular, that the serious student of the
-work of a master in any art has no reason to question his own judgment
-when it points him to admiration, merely because the object of his
-admiration is not to be counted among the immediate successes of the
-hour. Legros is not an immediate success. He has worked for
-five-and-twenty years, and there are intelligent people who see little
-in his pictures beyond their first ugliness. Each to his taste—we cannot
-always blame them; and Legros has been ugly sometimes gratuitously,
-sometimes with wantonness. But Legros is also a very grave and enduring
-master, whose work is now full of mistake, and now of power, and now
-again is certainly touched with that higher and keener faculty we call
-inspiration.
-
-The etchings of Legros range already, however, over a period of
-seven-and-twenty years; and that he began so young, and at a time when
-etching was not popular and the art had not become a trade, is a proof
-at least of the spontaneity of his pursuit of it. By temperament and
-instinct he was as much etcher as painter, perhaps even more. The
-process of etching being—always in skilled hands, of course—perhaps the
-readiest for the rendering of impressions and the expression of artistic
-thought, it is natural that Legros, whose art, whatever it may lack in
-immediate attractiveness, is one undoubtedly of impressions and of
-thoughts, should have turned to this process. And so well, indeed, has
-he increased his command of it—always with reference to his own
-particular business, to the order of impressions it is his own task to
-convey—that, though there are, indeed, several of his paintings which
-have the qualities of a master’s work, we get the best of him in his
-etchings. Great is the technical progress he has made in these since
-some of the first plates catalogued so well by M. Poulet-Malassis and
-Mr. Thibaudeau, but it is not to be imagined that the progress has been
-uninterrupted. Incompleteness and uncertainty are still likely to be
-visible. His execution, skilful at one time, and entirely responsive to
-his desire, is at another time halting, wayward, insufficiently
-controlled and directed. Therefore, though, as I say, the execution is
-not seldom excellent—economical of means and yet rich in the possession
-of various means—it would rarely be in itself the occasion of attracting
-notice to his work. With Legros, it is the conception that dominates.
-The conception is often such as recalls the highest achievements of Art.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-But the imagination of Legros, in virtue of which, quite as much as by
-occasional mannerisms of handling, he recalls that older and more
-pregnant Art which has well nigh passed from the very ken of the
-producers of our own day’s trivial array, is not in any sense derived
-from this or that past master; it is charged, on the contrary, in his
-most considerable pieces with a serious and pathetic poetry quite his
-own. Here and there, indeed, as in one early work—_Procession dans les
-Caveaux de Saint-Médard_—it is not imagination at all, as that is
-generally understood, but the keen observation of an artist content to
-reproduce, that alone is remarkable; and here there is a certain amount
-of audacity in the fidelity with which he has rendered the commonplace,
-the mean, the narrow faces of a certain section of the Parisian lower
-_bourgeoisie_ engaged in devotions which there is no beauty of form or
-of thought to make interesting to the beholder. It is a piece of pure
-realism—the hideous flounces and more hideous crinolines, the squat
-figures, the slop-shop fashions, the common faces empty of records. And
-in this pure and unrelieved realism there is a certain value, if there
-is no charm. But the pieces to which Legros will owe such fame as the
-better-judging connoisseurs and critics shall eventually accord him are
-those in which the artistic instinct and desire of beauty, either of
-form or of thought, has found some expression. It will be in part by
-such masculine, yet refined and graceful, portraits as those of M. Dalou
-and Mr. Poynter, such subtle ones as that of Cardinal Manning, such
-pathetic ones as that of M. Rodin here, that Legros will stand high. It
-will be in part by the etchings in which the pourtrayal of actual life
-has been guided by the research for beauty, as, for instance, in the
-_Chœur d’une Eglise Espagnole_, where not only is the head firm and
-dignified and the lighting more intricate than is usual with this
-master, but where the composition of bent figure and curved violoncello
-is of great repose and refinement of beauty. A more various specimen of
-the same type is to be found in a fine impression of _Les Chantres
-Espagnols_. They are eight in the choir of a church—four sit in the
-stalls, the others stand, of whom one turns the page of a missal placed
-on a lectern. The scene is mostly dark—mostly even very dark—but the
-light, by a very skilled treatment of it, falls here and there on
-lectern, missal, and hand of the old man sitting in the choir. The
-observation of reality in this plate has been at the same time keen and
-poetical, for nothing can be truer and nothing more impressive than the
-study of old faces out of which so much of the desire of life has gone,
-and the study of gestures which are those of hand and will waxing
-feeble. Two men, at least, are placed together in a pathetic harmony of
-weakness: the drooping hand of one and his drooped head, as he sits in
-his long-accustomed place; the open mouth of the other—his mouth opened
-with the feebleness of a decayed intelligence, with the slow
-understandings of a departing mind. Or, not to insist too much on a
-picturesqueness in which pathos predominates, notice, when the occasion
-presents itself, the first rendering of the subject known as the
-_Lutrin_, with its acolyte of rare youthful dignity; or as an example of
-work in which some little beauty of modelling has been sought to be
-united even with every-day realism, see the design of the bare knee in
-_L’Enfant Prodigue_.
-
-But where Legros is most apart and alone is, after all, in the subjects
-which owe most to the imagination, and of these the very finest are _La
-Mort du Vagabond_, _La Mort et le Bûcheron_, and _Le Savant endormi_.
-Something of the art that gives interest to these pieces is contained in
-the careful persistence with which the etcher brings the realism of
-physical ugliness into close contact and contrast with the spiritual and
-supernatural. A comely and well-to-do youth slumbering in his chair at
-the Marlborough could have no dreams an artist of Legros’s nature would
-think worthy of recording, but the ugly votary of science and
-intellectual speculation, who sleeps, from sheer weariness, in the
-armchair before which are still the implements of his study and
-research, has the dignity of strained endeavour; and M. Legros, in
-pourtraying him and suggesting the subjects of his dream, has reached an
-elevation which separates him from most of his contemporaries, by as
-much as the _Melancholia_ of Dürer is separated from the _Melancholia_
-of Beham. _La Mort du Vagabond_ is not a whit less suggestive in its
-contrast between the feebleness of the worn-out beggar now stretched out
-lonely on the pathside—his head raised, gasping, and his hat knocked
-away—and the force and fury of the storm that beats over dead tree and
-desolate common. The unity of tragic impression in homely life,
-preserved in this plate, will give it a permanent value among the great
-things of Art. _La Mort et le Bûcheron_ is more tender, not more nor
-less poetical, but less weird; and nothing short of a high and vigorous
-imagination could have saved from chance of ridicule, in days in which
-the symbolical has long ceased to be an habitual channel of expression,
-this etching of the veiled skeleton of Death appearing to the old man
-still busy with his field-work, and beckoning him gently, while he, with
-simple and ignorant yet not insensitive face, touched with awe and
-surprise, looks up under a sudden spell it is vain to hope to cast off,
-since for him, however unexpectedly, the hour has plainly come. Of this
-very fascinating subject, there exist impressions from two different
-plates: one of the plates, and in some respects the better and more
-pathetic one—the one in which the figure of Death is gentler and more
-persuasive, and in which the face of the woodman is the more mildly
-expressive—having suffered an accident after only about a dozen
-impressions had been taken from it. The second was then executed, with
-something less at first than the success of the earlier one, so that the
-almost unique and very rare impressions of the plate—whatever may chance
-to be their money value—represent it to the least advantage. It was
-retouched and retouched, and at length with more of reward for the
-trouble than Legros has generally been able to meet with when
-laboriously modifying his work in the attempt to realise his conception
-more fully; until at last the enterprising management of _L’Art_ was
-enabled to offer its readers for about three shillings a work of art not
-rare, indeed, but of exquisite beauty. The success of the first plate,
-which the acid had covered in a moment of neglect, had been almost
-refound.
-
-A final word about the landscapes. As a painter of landscape M. Legros
-is little known, but there exist, I believe, in London one or two
-considerable collections of water colours which exhibit almost
-exclusively his art in landscape. As far as the etchings show it at all,
-it is of the most account when it is called in for the accompaniment of
-one of those impressive and doleful ditties I have just been speaking
-of. Sometimes, however, it is good without this mission and
-significance, as in the _Pécheur_, where a delicate effect of early
-morning is given with exquisite refinement. But at other times, in which
-the artist is dealing with landscape charged for him with no especial
-meaning, his very observation of it seems to have been lacking in
-interest and acuteness, as in the broad slope of grass by the
-stream-side in his big print _Les Bûcherons_—a whole surface of ground
-that is treated mechanically and without any worthy apprehension. And
-yet this print, despite certain unpleasantness, contains in the heads of
-the woodcutters some of his finest work. A much more sketchy subject,
-_Paysage aux Meules_, has greater unity of impression. Like a good deal
-of Legros’s landscape, it is distinctively French, this particular
-glimpse of field and farm and rounded hill reminding one of the
-wide-stretching uplands of the Haut Boulognais. Other landscapes are of
-England. Others, again, are neither of England nor of France, nor of any
-land which may be read of in the guide-book or visited by the
-enterprising tourist, but of that land alone that rises in the
-imagination of artistic men.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- INDEX.
-
-
- BRACQUEMOND. His originality and limitation, p. iii.
-
-
- CLAUDE. His _Bouvier_ and _Shepherd and Shepherdess conversing_, p. 4.
-
- CROME. His etchings, p. 9.
-
-
- EARLOM. His flower-pieces in mezzotint, p. 25.
-
-
- GONSE. His catalogue of Jacquemart’s etchings, p. 18.
-
-
- HADEN. His quality of vigour, p. 2;
- his judgment of Méryon, p. 4;
- his earliest etchings, p. 5;
- _Mytton Hall_, p. 7;
- _Egham_, p. 7;
- _Water Meadow_, p. 7;
- _Calais Pier_, p. 7;
- _Penton Hook_, p. 8;
- _Sunset on the Thames_, p. 9;
- _Erith Marshes_, p. 9;
- _Agamemnon_, p. 10;
- _Sawley Abbey_, p. 10;
- _Dusty Millers_, p. 10;
- his Dorsetshire etchings, p. 11.
-
- HAMERTON, p. iii. and p. 17.
-
-
- JACQUEMART. His happy circumstances, p. 12;
- he renders the soul of matter, p. 14;
- his etchings of Oriental and _Sèvres_ porcelain, p. 15;
- _Brocca Italienne_, p. 16;
- _Vase de Vieux Vincennes_, p. 17;
- _Miroir Français_, p. 20;
- _Vénus Marine_, p. 21;
- _Salière de Troyes_, p. 21;
- his etchings after pictures, p. 23;
- his flower-pieces, p. 25;
- his work in water colour, p. 25;
- his concern with Art, not nature, p. 27.
-
-
- LEGROS. Essentially an etcher, p. 41;
- his _Procession dans les Caveaux de Saint-Médard_, p. 42;
- _Dalou_, p. 42;
- _Poynter_, p. 42;
- _Manning_, p. 42;
- _Rodin_, p. 42;
- _Les Chantres Espagnols_, p. 43;
- _Le Lutrin_, p. 43;
- _La Mort du Vagabond_, p. 44;
- _La Mort et le Bûcheron_, p. 44;
- his etched landscapes, p. 45.
-
-
- MACBETH, p. iii.
-
- MÉRYON. His method with architecture, p. 35.
-
-
- REMBRANDT. His _Ephraim Bonus_ and _Clément de Jonghe_, p. 4;
- his _Portrait of a woman lightly etched_, p. 15.
-
-
- THIBAUDEAU. His catalogue of Legros’s etchings, p. 41.
-
- TISSOT, p. iii.
-
-
- VANDYKE. A decisive sketcher, p. 3.
-
-
- WHISTLER. His quality of exquisiteness, p. 28;
- his decorative arrangements, p. 29;
- painted portraits, p. 30;
- his etched portraits, p. 32;
- _Fanny Leyland_, p. 33;
- _The Kitchen_, p. 33;
- _La Vieille aux Loques_, p. 34;
- his _Venice_ series, p. 35;
- _Free Trade Wharf_, p. 37;
- _Billingsgate_, p. 37;
- _Hungerford Bridge_, p. 38;
- _Thames Police_, p. 38;
- _Tyzack Whiteley_, p. 38;
- _Black Lion Wharf_, p. 38.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- LONDON
- PRINTED BY J. S. VIRTUE AND CO., LIMITED,
- CITY ROAD.
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- OTHER WORKS BY MR. WEDMORE.
-
- 7s. 6d. EACH.
-
-
- STUDIES IN ENGLISH ART.
-
- GAINSBOROUGH, MORLAND, REYNOLDS, FLAXMAN, STOTHARD,
- CROME, COTMAN, TURNER, CONSTABLE, DE WINT, DAVID COX,
- CRUIKSHANK.
-
- _Two Volumes._ SECOND EDITION.
-
-
- THE MASTERS OF GENRE PAINTING.
-
- REMBRANDT, DE HOOGH, NICHOLAS MAES, METSU, TERBURG,
- JAN STEEN, WATTEAU, LANCRET, PATER, CHARDIN, FRAGONARD,
- HOGARTH, and WILKIE.
-
- _With Sixteen Illustrations._
-
-
- PASTORALS OF FRANCE.
-
- “A LAST LOVE AT PORNIC,” “YVONNE OF CROISIC,” “THE FOUR
- BELLS OF CHARTRES.”
-
- SECOND EDITION.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- _ETCHINGS_
-
- ON SALE BY THE FINE ART SOCIETY.
-
- BY FRANCIS SEYMOUR HADEN.
-
-
- £. s. d.
-
- A By-road in Tipperary 6 6 0
-
- A Water Meadow 4 4 0
-
- Amalfi 1 11 6
-
- Amstelodam 1 11 6
-
- A Cottage Window 2 12 6
-
- Battersea 4 4 0
-
- Breaking up of the Agamemnon. First 5 5 0
- State £7 7 0 Second State
-
- Barque Refitting 1 1 0
-
- Brentford Ferry 2 12 6
-
- By Inveraron 3 3 0
-
- Brig at Anchor 3 3 0
-
- Cottages behind Horsley’s House 3 3 0
-
- Cranbrook 3 3 0
-
- Cardigan Bridge 2 12 6
-
- Combe Bottom 4 4 0
-
- Calais Pier. Second State 21 0 0
-
- Do. Small 1 11 6
-
- Dusty Millers 3 3 0
-
- Evening 1 1 0
-
- Early Morning—Richmond Park 2 12 6
-
- Egham 2 2 0
-
- Egham Lock 2 2 0
-
- Erith Marshes 4 4 0
-
- Fulham 2 12 6
-
- Greenwich 8 8 0
-
- Grim Spain—Burgos 3 3 0
-
- House of the Smith 2 12 6
-
- Hic Terminus Hæret 1 11 6
-
- Horsley’s House at Willesley 4 4 0
-
- Kensington Gardens. The Large Plate £2 3 3 0
- 12 6 Small Plate
-
- Kew Side 2 12 6
-
- Kilgaren Castle 2 12 6
-
- Kenarth 2 12 6
-
- Kidwelly Town 2 2 0
-
- Mount’s Bay 3 3 0
-
- Newcastle in Emlyn 2 12 6
-
- O Laborum! 1 11 6
-
- Out of Study Window 2 2 0
-
- On the Test. First State 5 5 0
-
- Purfleet 3 3 0
-
- Penton Hook 4 4 0
-
- Puff Asleep —
-
- Railway Encroachment 2 2 0
-
- Ruins in Wales 1 11 6
-
- Sub Tegmine 3 3 0
-
- Sonning Almshouses 2 2 0
-
- Shepperton 2 2 0
-
- Shere Millpond 5 5 0
-
- Sunset on the Thames. First State £3 3 0 3 3 0
- Second State
-
- Sketch on Back of Zinc Plate 1 11 6
-
- Sunset in Ireland 4 4 0
-
- Sonning 3 3 0
-
- Study of Stems 1 11 6
-
- Twickenham Bushes 0 10 6
-
- The Mill-Wheel. First State £3 3 0 3 3 0
- Second State
-
- Thomas Haden of Derby 2 2 0
-
- Thames Fishermen 4 4 0
-
- The Herd 4 4 0
-
- The Two Sheep 1 11 6
-
- The Holly Field 1 1 0
-
- Twickenham Church 3 3 0
-
- Towing-Path. First State £4 4 0 4 4 0
- Second State
-
- The Three Sisters 4 4 0
-
- The Inn at Sawley. (Unfinished) 4 4 0
-
- The Grande Chartreuse. (From Drawing by 2 2 0
- Turner)
-
- The Moat House 3 3 0
-
- The Two Asses 1 11 6
-
- The Turkish Bath, with One Figure 2 12 6
-
- The Turkish Bath, with Two Figures 3 3 0
-
- The Assignation 3 3 0
-
- Thames Ditton 4 4 0
-
- Willow Bank 2 2 0
-
- Windmill Hill 3 3 0
-
- Windsor 8 8 0
-
- Ye Compleate Angler 3 3 0
-
- Yacht Tavern, Erith 4 4 0
-
- THE VOLUME OF “ÉTUDES” 36 15 0
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- BY J. A. MCN. WHISTLER.
-
-
-_VENICE._ A SERIES OF TWELVE ETCHINGS.
-
- Limited to 100 Sets, 50 Guineas the Set; or separately as follows:—
-
- The Little Venice £4 4 0
- The Two Doorways 6 6 0
- The Beggars 8 8 0
- The Nocturne 5 5 0
- The Doorway 8 8 0
- The River 5 5 0
- The Little Mast 5 5 0
- The Little Lagoon 4 4 0
- The Palaces 8 8 0
- The Mast 5 5 0
- The Traghetto 8 8 0
- The Piazzetta 4 4 0
-
-
- -------
-
-
-_SIXTEEN THAMES ETCHINGS._
-
- Price 14 Guineas the Set in Portfolio; or separately as follows—
-
- 1. Black Lion Wharf £1 15 0
- 2. Wapping Wharf 1 11 6
- 3. The Forge 2 2 0
- 4. Old Westminster Bridge 1 5 0
- 5. Wapping 2 12 6
- 6. Old Hungerford 1 11 6
- 7. The Pool 1 11 6
- 8. The Fiddler 1 11 6
- 9. The Limeburners 2 2 0
- 10. The Little Pool 1 5 0
- 11. Eagle Wharf 1 15 0
- 12. Limehouse 1 11 6
- 13. Thames Warehouses 1 5 0
- 14. Millbank 1 5 0
- 15. Early Morning (Battersea) 1 1 0
- 16. Chelsea Bridge and Church 0 10 6
-
-
- -------
-
-
- _THE LITTLE LIMEHOUSE._ One Hundred £1 11 6
- Proofs Only
-
-
- _HURLINGHAM._ Sixty Artist’s Proofs £3 3 0
-
-
- _FULHAM._ Sixty Artist’s Proofs £3 3 0
-
-
- _PUTNEY._ Sixty Artist’s Proofs £3 3 0
-
-
- _PUTNEY BRIDGE._ Proofs £6 6 0
-
-
- _BATTERSEA BRIDGE._ Proofs £6 6 0
-
-
- -------
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- BY SAMUEL PALMER.
-
-
-_THE LONELY TOWER._ From “Il Penseroso.”
-
- -------
-
-_THE HERDSMAN’S COTTAGE_ (1850). Plate destroyed.
-
- -------
-
-_THE BELLMAN._ From “Il Penseroso” (1879). Sixty Remarque Proofs (of
- which few remain unsold) £4 4 0
-
- Plain Impressions 2 2 0
-
- -------
-
-_THE SKYLARK_ (1850). Plate destroyed £4 4 0
-
- -------
-
-_CHRISTMAS; or, Folding the Last Sheep._ From Bampfylde’s “Sonnet”
- (1850). A few Fine Proofs £3 3 0
-
- -------
-
-_THE WILLOW_ (1850). Mr. Palmer’s First Etching £0 10 6
-
- -------
-
-_THE SLEEPING SHEPHERD._ Plate destroyed £4 4 0
-
- -------
-
-_EARLY MORNING—Opening the Fold._ Remarque Proofs all sold. Artist’s
- Proofs £2 2 0
-
- -------
-
-_THE VINE._ Two Subjects on one Plate. Plate destroyed £5 5 0
-
- -------
-
-_THE EARLY PLOUGHMAN_ £2 2 0
-
- -------
-
-_THE HERDSMAN._ Plate destroyed £6 6 0
-
- -------
-
-_THE MORNING OF LIFE._ Plate destroyed £5 5 0
-
- -------
-
-_THE RISING MOON._ Plate destroyed £5 5 0
-
- -------------------------------------------
-
- _In addition to these, a large number of examples of Etchings by J.
-C. Hook, R.A., Rajon, Flameng, Unger, Gaillard, Waltner,
-Brunet-Debaines, F. Bracquemond, Jacquemart, Chifflart, Daubigny, Le
-Rat, Veyrassat, Appian, Tissot, Legros, Herkomer, &c., &c._
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- _ART BOOKS_
-
- PUBLISHED BY THE FINE ART SOCIETY.
-
- -------
-
-NOTE.—The rule of the Society in publishing Books is to make an issue
- sufficient only to meet the demand at the time of publication. By so
- doing they find the subscribers are materially benefited, as their
- books quickly increase in value.
-
- -------
-
-_Mr. Ruskin’s Notes on his Turner Drawings._ Exhibited at The Fine Art
- Society’s Galleries, 1878. Illustrated Large-paper Edition,
- consisting of 750 copies. Published £2 2s. Edition exhausted. A copy
- sold at Christie’s, in April, 1881, for £4 4s.
-
- The same, small paper, unillustrated, 2s. 6d.[2]
-
- The type of these editions has been distributed.
-
- -------
-
-_Mr. Ruskin’s Notes on Samuel Prout and William Hunt._ In illustration
- of a Loan Collection of Drawings exhibited at The Fine Art Society’s
- Galleries in 1879. Edition nearly exhausted. Large Paper,
- Illustrated Edition, consisting of 500 copies, £2 2s.
-
- The same, small paper, unillustrated, 2s. 6d.[2]
-
- The type of these editions has been distributed.
-
- -------
-
-_Mr. Seymour Haden’s Notes on Etching._ In illustration of the Art, and
- of his Collection of Etchings and Engravings of the Old Masters,
- exhibited at The Fine Art Society’s Galleries, 1879. Large Paper,
- Illustrated Edition, limited to 500 copies, £2 2s.
-
- The same, small paper, unillustrated, 1s.[2]
-
- The type of these editions has been distributed.
-
- -------
-
-_J. F. Millet—A Biography by W. E. Henley._ Illustrated with Twenty
- Etchings and Woodcuts, reproduced in facsimile. Large-paper Edition,
- limited to 500 copies, £1 1s.
-
- -------
-
-_Samuel Palmer: A Biography by his Son, Mr. A. H. Palmer._ Illustrated
- with an Original Etching by Samuel Palmer, entitled “Christmas,” and
- several Autotypes and Wood Engravings. The Edition will be limited
- to 500 copies. Price 31s. 6d.
-
- [_In the Press._
-
- -------
-
-_The Year’s Art, 1882._ A concise Epitome of all matters relating to
- Painting, Sculpture, and Architecture, which have occurred during
- the year 1881, in the United Kingdom, together with Information
- respecting the events of 1882. By MARCUS B. HUISH. Price 2s. 6d.
-
- -------
-
-_Notes by Mr. F. G. Stephens on a Collection of Drawings and Woodcuts by
- Thomas Bewick._ Exhibited at the Fine Art Society’s Rooms, 1880.
- Large Paper, Illustrated Edition, limited to 300 copies. Published
- at 21s.; price 31s. 6d. Edition exhausted.
-
- The same, small paper, unillustrated, 1s.[2]
-
- The type of these editions has been distributed.
-
- -------
-
-_Memoir and Complete Descriptive Catalogue of the Works of Charles
- Méryon._ By PHILIP BURTY and MARCUS B. HUISH. 1879. Limited to 125
- copies; type distributed. Published at 16s.; price 21s.
-
- -------
-
-
-
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- These Handbooks, together with “John Everett Millais, R.A.,” by
- Andrew Lang; “Samuel Palmer,” by F. G. Stephens; and “The Sea
- Painters,” are sold bound in half calf, complete in one Volume,
- price 10s. 6d.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- ● Transcriber’s Notes:
- ○ Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
- ○ Typographical errors were silently corrected.
- ○ Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only
- when a predominant form was found in this book.
- ○ Text that:
- was in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FOUR MASTERS OF ETCHING ***
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Four Masters of Etching, by Frederick Wedmore</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Four Masters of Etching</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Frederick Wedmore</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: September 27, 2021 [eBook #66392]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Charlene Taylor and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FOUR MASTERS OF ETCHING ***</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div>
- <h1 class='c001'>FOUR MASTERS OF ETCHING</h1>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<p class='c003'>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='box1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>This Edition is limited to</i></div>
- <div><i>Two Hundred and Fifty Copies.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span style="color:red;"><span class='c004'><em class='gesperrt'>FOUR MASTERS OF ETCHING</em>.</span></span></div>
- <div class='c002'>BY</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='c005'>FREDERICK WEDMORE.</span></div>
- <div class='c002'><span style="color:red;"><span class='c006'><i>WITH ORIGINAL ETCHINGS</i></span></span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span style="color:red;">BY</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span style="color:red;"><span class='c006'>HADEN, JACQUEMART, WHISTLER, <span class='fss'>AND</span> LEGROS.</span></span></div>
- <div class='c002'>LONDON:</div>
- <div class='c000'><em class='gesperrt'><span class='c007'>THE FINE ART SOCIETY, LIMITED.</span></em></div>
- <div class='c000'>148, NEW BOND STREET.</div>
- <div class='c000'>1883.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c008' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_iii'>iii</span>
- <h2 class='c009'>PREFACE</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>It</span> is well to say, in a word or two, what this short book aims at.
-Unavoidably inferior to Mr. Hamerton’s in merit, it is voluntarily
-much more limited in scheme. Taking only the four artists who
-seem to me most worthy of note among the many good etchers of
-our day, it seeks to study their work with a degree of detail unnecessary
-and even impossible in a volume of wider scope. In trying
-to do this, it can hardly help affording, at least incidentally, some
-notion of what I hold to be the right principles of etching, nor can
-it wholly ignore the relation of etching to other art, or the relation
-of Art to Nature and Life. But these points are touched but briefly,
-and only by the way.</p>
-<p class='c011'>A book of larger aim, on Etching in England and France, might
-justifiably have given almost as much importance to Macbeth and
-Tissot here, and to Bracquemond there, as has been given in the
-annexed pages to Haden, Whistler, Jacquemart, and Legros. But
-Macbeth and Tissot belong to a younger generation than do any of
-my four masters. Much of what the art of etching could do in modern
-days was already in evidence before their work began. My four
-masters are four pioneers. Bracquemond may be a pioneer also; but
-in his original work, skilled and individual as that is, he has chosen
-to be very limited. The place he occupies is honourable, but it is
-small.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>About the four chapters that here follow I need say very little.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_iv'>iv</span>That on Seymour Haden has been passed through the <i>Art Journal</i>,
-that on Legros through the <i>Academy</i>, that on Jules Jacquemart through
-the <i>Nineteenth Century</i>. All have now been revised. Something of the
-chapter on Whistler has also appeared in the <i>Nineteenth Century</i>, but in
-quite different form, and I will explain why. In the first place, since
-that article appeared, Mr. Whistler has given me cause to modify to
-some extent my estimate of his art. Having seen this cause, I have
-acted on it. I am not a Mede nor a Persian. And in a system of
-criticism which seeks to inquire and understand, rather than to
-denounce, there is place for change. Again, much of the article in
-the <i>Nineteenth Century</i> was occasioned not by Mr. Whistler’s practice,
-but by the attack which he made upon a great teacher and critic,
-and, by implication, upon all critics who allow themselves that
-abstinence from technical labour which is often essential if their
-criticism is to be neither immature for want of time to spend on it nor
-prejudiced because of their exclusive association with some special
-ways or cliques in art. Whatever dealt with this business I have now
-withdrawn. It was written for a particular purpose, and its purpose
-was served.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A word now on a matter of detail. Two expressions in the body
-of this volume—“our <i>Dusty Millers</i>” (page <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>), and “<i>M. Rodin</i>
-here” (page <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>)—which only the really careful reader will honour me
-by noticing, are due to the fact that after the body of the volume was
-finally printed, some change was made in the choice of the illustrations.
-For Mr. Haden’s copper of <i>Dusty Millers</i>, I have been happy
-to be able to substitute <i>Grim Spain</i>, the only Spanish subject of his
-which I thoroughly like. And in place of M. Legros’s learned but
-hardly attractive portrait of M. Rodin, it has been still more fortunate
-that it has been possible to procure the portrait of Mr. Watts, the
-painter, one of the most triumphant instances of Legros’s art.</p>
-<div class='c012'>F. W.</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='small'><i>London, 1883.</i></span></p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c008' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_v'>v</span>
- <h2 class='c009'>TABLE OF CONTENTS.</h2>
-</div>
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='31%' />
-<col width='52%' />
-<col width='15%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c014'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c015'><span class='xsmall'>PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'><span class='sc'>Chapter I.</span></td>
- <td class='c014'>SEYMOUR HADEN</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#ch01'>1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'><span class='sc'>Chapter II.</span></td>
- <td class='c014'>JULES JACQUEMART</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#ch02'>12</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'><span class='sc'>Chapter III.</span></td>
- <td class='c014'>J. A. M. WHISTLER</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#ch03'>28</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c013'><span class='sc'>Chapter IV.</span></td>
- <td class='c014'>ALPHONSE LEGROS</td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#ch04'>40</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c008' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_vi'>vi</span>
- <h2 class='c009'>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.</h2>
-</div>
-<table class='table1' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='39%' />
-<col width='49%' />
-<col width='11%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c015'><span class='xsmall'>PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>“GRIM SPAIN”</td>
- <td class='c013'>Etched by <span class='sc'>F. Seymour Haden</span></td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#i010'>10</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>ORIENTAL PORCELAIN</td>
- <td class='c013'>by <span class='sc'>Jules Jacquemart</span></td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#i016'>16</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>PUTNEY</td>
- <td class='c013'>by <span class='sc'>J. A. McN. Whistler</span></td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#i036'>36</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>PORTRAIT OF G. F. WATTS, R.A.</td>
- <td class='c013'>by <span class='sc'>Alphonse Legros</span></td>
- <td class='c015'><a href='#i042'>42</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c008' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
- <h2 id='ch01' class='c009'>CHAPTER I.<br /> <br /><span class='c017'>SEYMOUR HADEN.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>Perhaps</span> the two qualities which, as one gets a little <i>blasé</i> about
-the productions of Art, continue the most to stir and stimulate, and to
-quicken the sense of enjoyment, are the quality of vigour and the
-quality of exquisiteness. If an artist is so fortunate as to possess both
-these virtues in any fulness, he is sure not only to please a chosen
-public during several generations, but to please the individual student—if
-he be a capable student—at all times and in all moods, and, of
-the two, perhaps, that is really the severer test. But to have these
-qualities in any fulness, and in equal measure, is given to a man only
-here and there over the range of centuries. It is given to a Titian, it
-is given to a Rembrandt, and of course to a Turner; it is given in the
-days of the Grand Monarch to a Watteau, and in the days of the
-Second Empire to a Méryon. But so notable and rare a union is
-denied—is it not?—even to a Velasquez; while what we praise most
-in Moreau le Jeune is by no means a facility of vigour, and what is
-characteristic of David Cox is certainly no charm of exquisiteness. To
-unite the two qualities—I mean always, of course, in the fulness and
-equality first spoken of—demands not a rich temperament alone. The
-full display of either by itself demands that. It demands a temperament
-of quite exceptional variety: the presence, it sometimes seems,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>almost of two personalities—so unlike are the two phases of the gift
-which we call genius.</p>
-<p class='c011'>With the artists of energy and vigour I class Mr. Seymour Haden.
-Theirs is the race to which, indeed, quite obviously, he belongs. Alive,
-undoubtedly, to grace of form, fire and vehemence of expression are
-yet his dominant qualities. With him, as the artistic problem is first
-conceived, so must it be executed, and it must be executed immediately.
-His energy is not to be exhausted, but of patience there is a
-smaller stock. For him, as a rule, no second thought is the wisest;
-there is no fruitful revision, no going back to-day upon yesterday’s
-effort; little of careful piecing and patching, to put slowly right what
-was wrong to begin with. He is the artist of the first impression.
-Probably it was just and justly conveyed; but if not, there the failure
-stands, such as it is, to be either remembered or forgotten, but hardly to
-be retrieved. Such as it is, it is done with, no more to be recalled
-than the player’s last night’s performance of Hamlet or Macbeth.
-Other things will be in the future: the player is looking forward to
-to-night; but last night—that is altogether in the past.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>There is no understanding Seymour Haden’s work, its virtues and
-deficiencies, unless this note of his temperament, this characteristic
-of his productions, is continually borne in mind. It is the secret of
-his especial delight in the art of etching; the secret of the particular
-uses to which he has so resolutely applied that art. With the admission
-of the characteristic, comes necessarily the admission of the limitation
-it suggests. Accustomed to labour and patience, not only in the preparation
-for the practice of an art, but in the actual practice of it, one
-may possibly be suspicious of the art which substantially demands that
-its work shall be done in a day if it is to be done at all. Such art, one
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>says, forfeits, at all events, its claim to the rank that is accorded to the
-<i>œuvre de longue haleine</i>, when that is carried to a successful issue and
-not to an impotent conclusion. To flicker bravely for an hour; to
-burn continuously at a white heat—they are very different matters.
-The mental powers which the two acts typify must be differently valued.
-And the art that asks, as one of its conditions, that it shall be swift,
-not only because swiftness is sometimes effective, but because the
-steadiness of sustained effort has a difficulty of its own—that art, to use
-an illustration from poetry and from music, takes up its place, voluntarily,
-with the lyrists, and with Schubert, as we knew him of old—foregoes
-voluntarily all comparison with the epic, and with Beethoven.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Well, this remark—a remonstrance we can hardly call it—has
-undoubtedly to be accepted. Only it must be laid to Mr. Seymour
-Haden’s credit that he has shown a rare sagacity in the choice of his
-method of expression. The conditions of the art of etching—a special
-branch of the engraver’s art, and not to be considered wholly alone—are
-fitted precisely to his temperament, and suit his means to perfection.
-Etching is qualified especially to give the fullest effect to the
-mental impression with the least possible expenditure of merely tedious
-work. Etching is for the vigorous sketch—and it is for the exquisite
-sketch likewise. It is for the work in which suggestion may be ample
-and unstinted, but in which realisation may, if the artist chooses,
-hardly be pursued at all. To say that, has become one of the commonplaces
-of criticism. We are not all of us so gifted, however, that
-commonplaces are to be dispensed with for the remainder of time.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Of the great bygone masters of the art, some have pursued it in
-Mr. Haden’s way, and others have made it approach more nearly to
-the work of the deliberate engraver. Vandyke etched as a speedy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>and decisive sketcher; the later and elaborate work added to his plates
-was added by other hands, and produced only a monotonous completeness
-destructive of the first charm, the charm of the vivid impression.
-Méryon, whose noble work Mr. Haden has rightly felt and pronounced
-to be “not impulsive and spontaneous, but reflective and constructive,
-slow and laborious,” used etching evidently in a different method and
-for different ends. With something of the patience of a deliberate
-line-engraver, he built up his work, piece by piece and stroke by
-stroke: touching here, and tinkering there—he says so himself—and
-the wonder of it is, that for all his slowness and delay, the work itself
-remains simple and broad, and the poetical motive is held fast to.
-This Mr. Haden has expressly recognised. Nothing eluded Méryon.
-The impressions that with some men come and go, he pertinaciously
-retained. Through all mechanical difficulties, his own quality of concentrativeness
-preserved to his work the quality of unity. Then, again,
-it must be said that the greatest etcher of old time, Rembrandt, and
-one of the greatest, Claude, employed the two methods, and found the
-art equal to the expression both of the first fancy and of the realised
-fact. To see which, one may compare the first state of Rembrandt’s
-<i>Clément de Jonghe</i>—with its rapid seizure of the features of a character
-of extraordinary subtlety—and the <i>Ephraim Bonus</i>, with its
-deliberate record of face and gesture, dress and environment; and in
-Claude the exquisite free sketching in the first state of <i>Shepherd
-and Shepherdess</i> with the quite final work of the second state of
-<i>Le Bouvier</i>. Mr. Haden, then, has full justification for his view of
-etching; yet Mr. Haden’s view of etching is not the only one that can
-be held with fairness.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For all but forty years now Seymour Haden has been an etcher,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>so that we may naturally see in his work the characteristics of
-youth and those of an advanced maturity, in which, nevertheless,
-the eye is not dimmed nor the natural fire abated. That is to say,
-the mass of his labour—over a hundred and eighty etchings—already
-affords the opportunity of comparison between subjects essayed with
-the careful and delicate timidity of a student of twenty, and subjects
-disposed of with the command and assurance that come of years, of
-experience, and—may I add?—of recognition. But in his early time
-Mr. Haden did but little on the copper, and then he would have had
-no reason to resent the title of “amateur,” now somewhat unreasonably
-bestowed on a workman who has given us the <i>Agamemnon</i>, the
-<i>Sunset on the Thames</i>, the <i>Sawley</i>, and the <i>Calais Pier</i>. Somewhere,
-perhaps, knocking about the world are the six little plates,
-chiefly of Roman subjects, which Mr. Haden painfully and delicately
-engraved in the years 1843 and 1844. All that remains of them,
-known to the curious in such matters, is a tiny group of impressions
-cherished in the upper chambers of a house in Hertford Street—a
-scanty barrier, indeed, between these first tentative efforts and
-oblivion.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But in 1858 and 1859 Mr. Haden began to etch seriously; he
-began to give up to the practice of this particular way of draughtsmanship
-a measure of time that permitted well-addressed efforts and
-serious accomplishments. Fine conceptions in all the Arts ask, as
-their most essential condition, some leisure of mind, some power
-of acquisition of the happy mood in which one sees the world best,
-and in which one can labour joyously at passing on the vision. The
-best Art may be produced with trouble, but it must be with the
-“joyful trouble” of Macduff. Nothing is more marked in the long
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>array of Mr. Haden’s mature work than the sense of pleasure he
-has had in doing it. How much, generally, has it been the result
-of pleasant impressions! How much the most satisfactory and
-sufficient has it been when it has been the most spontaneous! Compare
-the absolute unity, the clearly apparent motive, of such an
-etching as <i>Sunset on the Thames</i> with the more obscure aim and
-more limited achievement of the <i>Windsor</i>. The plates of the fruitful
-years 1859, 1860, 1863, 1864, and so onward, were done, it seems,
-under happy conditions.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Any one who turns over Seymour Haden’s plates in chronological
-order, will find that though, as it chanced, a good many years had
-passed, yet very little work in etching had been done before the artist
-had found his own method and was wholly himself. There were first
-the six dainty little efforts of 1843 and 1844; then, when etching was
-resumed in 1858—or, rather, when it was for the first time taken
-to seriously—there were the plates of <i>Arthur</i>, <i>Dasha</i>, <i>A Lady
-Reading</i>, and <i>Amalfi</i>. In these he was finding his way; and
-then, with the first plates of the following year, his way was found;
-we have the <i>Mytton Hall</i>, the <i>Egham</i>, and the <i>Water Meadow</i>,
-perfectly vigorous, perfectly suggestive sketches, still unsurpassed.
-In later years we find a later manner, a different phase of his
-talent, a different result of his experience; but in 1859 he was
-already, I repeat, entirely himself, and doing work that is neither
-strikingly better nor strikingly worse than the work which has followed
-it a score of years after. In the work of 1859, and in the work of the
-last period, there will be found about an equal measure of beautiful
-production. In each there will be something to admire warmly, and
-something that will leave us indifferent. And in the etchings of 1859,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>in the very plates that I have mentioned, there is already enough to
-attest the range of the artist’s sympathy with nature and with
-picturesque effect. <i>Mytton Hall</i>, seen or guessed at through the
-gloom of its weird trees, is remarkable for a certain garden stateliness—a
-disorder that began in order, a certain dignity of nature in
-accord with the curious dignity and quietude of Art. The <i>Egham</i>
-subject has the silence of the open country; the <i>Water Meadow</i>
-is an artist’s subject quite as peculiarly, for “the eye that sees” is
-required most of all when the question is how to find the beautiful in
-the apparently commonplace.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Next year, amongst other good work, we have the sweet little plate
-of <i>Combe Bottom</i>, which, in a fine impression, more than holds its
-own against the <i>Kensington Gardens</i>, and gives us at least as
-much enjoyment by its excellence of touch as does the more intricate
-beauty of the <i>Shore Mill Pond</i>, with its foliage so varied and so rich.
-In the next year to which any etchings are assigned in Sir William
-Drake’s catalogue—a thoroughly systematic book, and done with the
-aid of much information from the author of the plates—we find Mr.
-Haden departing from his usual habit of recording his impression of
-nature, for the object, sometimes not a whit less worthy, of recording
-his impression of some chosen piece of master’s art. This is in the
-year 1865, and the subject is a rendering of Turner’s drawing of the
-<i>Grande Chartreuse</i>, and it is an instance of the noble and artistic
-translation of work to which a translator may hold himself bound to be
-faithful. And here is the proper place, I think, to mention the one
-such other instance of a subject inspired, not by nature, but by the art
-of Turner, which Seymour Haden’s work affords—the large plate of
-the <i>Calais Pier</i>, done in 1874. Nothing shows Mr. Haden’s sweep
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>of hand, his masculine command of his means, better than that. Such
-an exhibition of spontaneous force is altogether refreshing. One or
-two points about it demand to be noted. In the first place, it makes
-no pretence, and exhibits no desire, to be a pure copy. Without
-throwing any imputation on the admirable craft of the pure interpreter
-and simple reproducer who enables us to enjoy so much of an art that
-might otherwise never come near to many of us, I may yet safely say
-that I feel sure that Mr. Haden had never the faintest intention of
-performing for the <i>Calais Pier</i> this copyist’s service. To him the
-<i>Calais Pier</i> of Turner—the sombre earlyish work of the master,
-now hanging in the National Gallery—was as a real scene. It was not
-to be scrupulously imitated; what was to be realised, or what was to
-be suggested, was the impression that it made. With a force of
-expression peculiar to him, Seymour Haden has succeeded in this aim;
-but, I think, he has succeeded best in the rare unpublished state which
-he knows as the “first biting,” and next best in the second state—the
-first state having some mischief of its own to bear which in the
-preparatory proofs had not arisen, and in the second state had ceased.
-The plate is arranged now with a ground for mezzotint—it lies awaiting
-that work—and if Mr. Haden, having now retraced to the full such
-steps as may have been at least partially mistaken, is but master of
-the new method—can but apply the mezzotint with anything of that
-curious facility and success with which Turner applied it to a few of
-his plates in <i>Liber Studiorum</i>, in which the professional engraver had
-no part—then we shall have a <i>chef-d’œuvre</i> of masculine suggestion
-which will have been worth waiting for.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>To go back to the somewhat earlier plates. The <i>Penton Hook</i>,
-which is one of many wrought in 1864, is another instance—and we
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>have had several already—of the artist’s singular power in the suggestion
-of tree form. Of actual leafage, leafage in detail, he is a less
-successful interpreter, as is indeed only natural in an etcher devoted on
-the whole to broad effects, looking resolutely at the <i>ensemble</i>. Detail
-is nothing to him—<i>ensemble</i>, balance, is all. But the features of trees,
-as growth of trunk and bend of bough reveal them, he gives to us as
-no other contemporary etcher can. And in old Art they are less varied
-in Claude and in Ruysdael. Mere leafage counted for more with both
-of these. And if it is too much to compare Mr. Haden as a draughtsman
-of the tree with a master of painting so approved as Crome—the
-painter especially of oak and willow—as an etcher of the tree he
-may yet be invited to occupy no second place, for Crome’s rare etchings
-are remarkable for draughtsmanship chiefly. Crome knew little of
-technical processes in etching, and so no full justice can ever be done
-to his etched work, which passed, imperfect, out of his own hands, and
-was then spoilt in the hands of others—dull, friendly people, who
-fancied they knew more than he did of the trick of the craft, but who
-knew nothing of the instinct of the art. Crome himself in etching was
-like a soldier unequipped. Mr. Haden has a whole armoury of
-weapons.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Seymour Haden has been a fisherman; I do not know whether he
-has been a sailor. But, at all events, purely rural life and scene, however
-varied in kind, are discovered to be insufficient, and the foliage
-of the meadow and the waters of the trout stream are often left for the
-great sweep of tidal river, the long banks that enclose it, the wide sky
-that enlivens every great flat land, and by its infinite mobility and
-immeasurable light gives a soul, I always think, to the scenery of the
-plain. Then we have <i>Sunset on the Thames</i> (1865), <i>Erith Marshes</i>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>(1865), and the <i>Breaking Up of the Agamemnon</i> (1870), the last of them
-striking a deep poetic note—that of our associations with an England
-of the past that has allowed us the England of to-day—a note struck
-by Turner in the <i>Fighting Téméraire</i>, and struck so magnificently
-by Browning and by Tennyson<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c018'><sup>[1]</sup></a> in verse for which no Englishman
-can ever be too thankful.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c019'><span class='label'><a href='#r1'>1</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>I mean, of course, in “Home Thoughts from Abroad,”
-and in the “Revenge: a Ballad of the Fleet.”</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>In the technique of these later etchings there is, perhaps, no very
-noticeable departure from that of the earlier but yet mature work.
-But in composition or disposition of form we seem to see an increasing
-love of the sense of spaciousness, breadth, potent effect. The work
-seems, in these best examples, to become more dramatic and more
-moving. The hand demands occasion for the large exercise of its
-freedom. These characteristics are very noticeable in the <i>Sawley
-Abbey</i> of 1873. Nor are they absent from our <i>Dusty Millers</i>.</p>
-
-<div id='i010' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i010.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><i>Sawley Abbey</i> is etched on zinc, a substance of which Mr.
-Haden has of late become fond. It affords “a fat line”—a line
-without rigidity—and so far it is good. But the practical difficulty
-with it is that the particles of iron it contains make it uncertain and
-tricky, and we may notice that an etching on zinc is apt to be full of
-spots and dots. It succeeds admirably, however, where it does not
-fail very much. Of course its frequent failure places it out of the
-range of the pure copyist who copies or translates as matter of business.
-He cannot afford its risk. In 1877—a year in which Mr.
-Haden made a number of somewhat undesirable etchings in Spain,
-and a more welcome group of sketches in Dorsetshire, on the downs and
-the coast—Mr. Haden worked much upon zinc. And it is in this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>year that a change that might before have been foreseen is clearly
-apparent. Dry point before this had been united with etching, but not
-till now have we much of what is wholly dry point; and from this date
-the dry-point work is almost, though not altogether, continuous, the
-artist having rejoiced, he tells me, in its freedom and rapidity.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Dorsetshire etchings, <i>Windmill Hill</i>, <i>Nine Barrow Down</i>,
-and the like, are most of them dry points. In them, though the treatment
-of delicate distances is not evaded, there is especial opportunity
-for strong and broad effects of light and shade. Perhaps it is to these
-that a man travels as his work continues, and as, in continuing, it
-develops. At least it may be so in landscape.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Here, for the present, is arrested the etched work of an artist
-thoroughly individual, thoroughly vigorous, but against whom I have
-charged, by implication, sometimes a lack of exquisiteness, the only
-too frequent but not inevitable drawback of the quality of force. So
-much for the work of the hand. For the process of the mind—the
-character which sets the hand upon the labour, and pricks it on to the
-execution of the aim—the worst has been said also, when I said, at the
-beginning, that Mr. Haden lacked that power of extremely prolonged
-concentration which produced the epic in literature and the epic in
-painting. These two admissions made, there is little of just criticism
-of Seymour Haden’s work that must not be admiring and cordial—the
-record of enjoyment rather than of dissatisfaction—so much
-faithful and free suggestion does the work contain of the impressions
-that gave rise to it, so much variety is compassed, so much are we
-led into unbroken paths, and so much evidence is there of eager
-desire to enlarge the limits of our Art, whether by plunge into a new
-theme, or by application of a new process.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c008' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>
- <h2 id='ch02' class='c009'>CHAPTER II.<br /> <br /><span class='c017'>JULES JACQUEMART.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>There</span> died, in September, 1880, at his mother’s house in the high
-road between the Arc de Triomphe and the Bois, a unique artist
-whose death was for the most part unobserved by the frequenters of
-picture galleries. He had contributed but little to picture galleries.
-There had not been given to Jules Jacquemart the pleasure of a very
-wide notoriety, but in many ways he was happy, in many fortunate.
-He was fortunate, to begin with, in his birth; for though he was
-born in the <i>bourgeoisie</i>, it was in the cultivated <i>bourgeoisie</i>, and it was in
-the <i>bourgeoisie</i> of France. His father, Albert Jacquemart, the known
-historian of pottery and porcelain, and of ancient and fine furniture, was
-of course a faithful and diligent lover of beautiful things, so that Jules
-Jacquemart was reared in a house where little was ugly and much
-was precious; a house organized, albeit unconsciously, on William
-Morris’s admirable plan, “Have nothing in your home that you do
-not know to be useful or believe to be beautiful.” Thus his own
-natural sensitiveness, which he had inherited, was highly cultivated
-from the first. From the first he breathed the liberal and refining air
-of Art. He was happy in the fact that adequate fortune gave him the
-liberty, in health, of choosing his work, and in sickness, of taking
-his rest. With comparatively rare exceptions, he did precisely the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>things which he was fitted to do, and did them perfectly, and being
-ill when he had done them, he betook himself to the exquisite South,
-where colour is, and light—the things we long for the most when we
-are most tired in cities—and so there came to him towards the end a
-surprise of pleasure in so beautiful a world. He was happy in being
-surrounded all his life long by passionate affection in the narrow circle
-of his home. His mother survives him—the experience of bereavement
-being hers, when it would naturally have been his. For himself,
-he was happier than she, for he had never suffered any quite irreparable
-loss. And in one other way he was probably happy—in that he died
-in middle age, his work being entirely done. The years of deterioration
-and of decay, in which first the artist does but dully reproduce the
-spontaneous work of his youth, and then is sterile altogether—the
-years in which he is no longer the fashion at all, but only the landmark
-or the finger-post of a fashion that is past—the years when a name
-once familiar is uttered at rare intervals and in tones of apology as the
-name of one whose performance has never quite equalled the promise
-he had aforetime given—these years never came to Jules Jacquemart.
-He was spared these years.</p>
-<p class='c011'>But few people care, or are likely to care very much, for the things
-which chiefly interested him, and which he reproduced in his art; and
-even the care for these things, where it does exist, does, unfortunately,
-by no means imply the power to appreciate the art by which they are
-retained and diffused. “Still-life,” using the expression in its
-broadest sense—the pourtrayal of objects, natural or artificial, for the
-objects’ sake, and not as background or accessory—has never been
-rated very highly or very widely loved. Here and there a professed
-connoisseur has had pleasure from some piece of exquisite workmanship;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>a rich man has looked with idly caressing eye upon the skilful
-record of his gold plate or of the grapes of his forcing-house. There
-has been praise for the adroit Dutchmen, and for Lance and Blaise
-Desgoffe. But the public generally—save perhaps in the case of
-William Hunt, his birds’ nests and his primroses—has been indifferent
-to these things, and often the public has been right in its indifference,
-for often these things are done in a poor spirit, a spirit of servile imitation
-or servile flattery, with which Art has nothing to do. But there
-are exceptions, and there is a better way of looking at these things.
-William Hunt was often one of these exceptions; Chardin was always—save
-in a rare instance or so of dull pomposity of rendering—Jules
-Jacquemart, take him for all in all, was of these exceptions the most
-brilliant and the most peculiar. He, in his best art of etching, and his
-fellows and forerunners in the art of painting, have done something to
-endow the beholders of their work with a new sense, with the capacity
-for new experiences of enjoyment—they have pourtrayed not so much
-matter as the very soul of matter. They have put matter in its finest
-light: it has got new dignity. Chardin did this with his peaches, his
-pears, his big coarse bottles, his copper saucepans, his silk-lined caskets.
-Jules Jacquemart did it—we shall see in more of detail presently—very
-specially with the finer work of artistic men in household matter
-and ornament; with his blue and white porcelain, with his polished
-steel of chased armour and sword-blade, with his Renaissance mirrors,
-with his precious vessels of crystal and jade and jasper. But when he
-was most fully himself, his work most characteristic and individual, he
-shut himself off from popularity. Even untrained observers could
-accept the agile engraver as an interpreter of other men’s pictures—of
-Meissonier’s inventions, or Van der Meer’s, or Greuze’s—but they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>could not accept him as the interpreter at first hand of the treasures
-which were so peculiarly his own that he may almost be said to have
-discovered them and their beauty. They were not alive to the
-wonders that have been done in the world by the hands of artistic
-men. How could they be alive to the wonders of this their reproduction—their
-translation, rather, and a very free and personal one—into
-the subtle lines, the graduated darks, the soft or sparkling lights,
-of the artist in etching?</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>On September 7th, 1837, Jacquemart was born, in Paris, and the
-profession of Art, in one or other of its branches, came naturally to a
-man of his race. A short period of practice in draughtsmanship, and
-only a small experience of the particular business of etching, sufficed
-to make him a master. As time proceeded, he of course developed;
-he found new methods—ways not previously known to him. But
-little of what is obviously tentative and immature is to be noticed even
-in his earliest work. He springs into his art an artist fully armed,
-like Rembrandt with the wonderful portrait of his mother “lightly
-etched.” In 1860, when he is but twenty-three, he is at work upon
-the illustrations to his father’s <i>Histoire de la Porcelaine</i>, and though
-in that publication the absolute realisation of wonderful matter
-is not, perhaps, so noteworthy as in the <i>Gemmes et Joyaux de la
-Couronne</i>—the touch is not so large, so energetic, and so free—there
-is evident already the hand of the delicate artist and the eye
-that can appreciate and render almost unconsidered beauties. Exquisite
-matter and the forms that Art has given to common things have
-found their new interpreter. The <i>Histoire de la Porcelaine</i> contains
-twenty-six plates, most of which are devoted to Oriental china, of
-which the elder Jacquemart possessed a magnificent collection at a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>time when the popular rage for “blue and white” was still unpronounced.
-Many of Albert Jacquemart’s pieces figure in the book;
-they were pieces the son had lived with and which he knew familiarly.
-Their charm, their delicacy, he perfectly represented, and of each
-individual piece he appreciated the characteristics, passing too, without
-sense of difficulty, from the <i>bizarre</i> ornamentation of the East to
-the ordered forms and satisfying symmetry which the high taste of the
-Renaissance gave to its products. Thus, in the <i>Histoire de la Porcelaine</i>,
-amongst the quaintly naturalistic decorations from China, and
-amongst the ornaments of Sèvres, with their pretty boudoir graces
-and airs of light luxury fit for the Marquise of Louis Quinze and the
-sleek young <i>abbé</i>, her pet and her counsellor, we find, rendered with
-just as thorough an appreciation, a <i>Brocca Italienne</i>, the Brocca of the
-Medicis, of the sixteenth century, slight and tall, where the lightest
-of Renaissance forms, the thin and reed-like lines of the <i>arabesque</i>—no
-mass or splash of colour—is patterned with measured exactitude, with
-rhythmic completeness, over the smoothish surface. It is wonderful
-how little work there is in the etching, and how much is suggested.
-The actual touches are almost as few as those which Jacquemart
-employed afterwards in some of his light effects of rock-crystal, the
-material which he has interpreted perhaps best of all. One counts
-the touches, and one sees how soon and how strangely he has got the
-power of suggesting all that he does not actually give, of suggesting
-all that is in the object by the little that is in the etching. On such
-work may be bestowed, amongst much other praise, that particular
-praise which, to fashionable French criticism, delighted especially
-with the feats of adroitness, and occupied with the evidence of the
-artist’s dexterity, seems the highest—<i>Il n’y a rien, et il y a tout.</i></p>
-
-<div id='i016' class='figcenter id001'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>
-<img src='images/i016.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Execution so brilliant can hardly also be faultless, and without
-mentioning many instances among his earlier work, where the defect
-is chiefly noticeable, it may be said that the roundness of round
-objects is more than once missing in his etchings. Strange that the
-very quality first taught to, and first acquired by, the most ordinary
-pupil of a Government School of Art should have been wanting to an
-artist often as adroit in his methods as he was individual in his vision!
-The <i>Vase de Vieux Vincennes</i>, from the collection of M. Léopold
-Double, is a case to the point. It has the variety of tone, the seeming
-fragility of texture and ornament, the infinity of decoration, the
-rendering of the subtle curvature of a flower, and of the transparency
-of the wing of a passing insect. It has everything but the roundness—everything
-but the quality that is the easiest and the most common.
-But so curious a deficiency, occasionally displayed, could not weigh
-against the amazing evidence of various cleverness, and Jacquemart
-was shortly engaged by the publishers and engaged by the French
-Government.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The difference in the commissions accorded by those two—the
-intelligent service which the one was able to render to the nation in
-the act of setting the artist about his appropriate work, and, broadly
-speaking, the hindrance which the other opposed to his individual
-development—could nowhere go unnoticed, and least of all could go
-unnoticed in a land like ours, too full of a dull pride in <i>laissez faire</i>,
-in private enterprise, in Government inaction. To the initiative of
-the Imperial Government, as Mr. Hamerton well pointed out when
-he was appreciating Jacquemart as long as twelve years ago, was due
-the undertaking by the artist of the colossal task, by the fulfilment of
-which he secured his fame. Moreover, if the Imperial Government
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>had not been there to do this thing, this thing would never have been
-done, and some of the noblest and most intricate objects of Art in
-the possession of the State would have gone unrecorded—their beauty
-unknown and undiffused. Even as it is, though the task definitely
-commissioned was brought to its proper end, a desirable sequel that
-had been planned remained untouched. The hand that recorded the
-ordered grace of Renaissance ornament would have shown as well as
-any the intentions of more modern craftsmen—the decoration of the
-Eighteenth Century in France, with its light and luxurious elegance.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The <i>Histoire de la Porcelaine</i>, then—begun in 1860, and published
-in 1862 by Techener, a steady friend of Jacquemart—was
-followed in 1864 by the <i>Gemmes et Joyaux de la Couronne</i>. The
-<i>Chalcographie</i> of the Louvre—the department which concerns itself
-with the issue of commissioned prints—undertook the publication
-of the <i>Gemmes et Joyaux</i>. In the series there were sixty subjects,
-or at least sixty plates, for sometimes Jacquemart, seated by his
-window in the Louvre (which is reflected over and over again at
-every angle in the lustre of the objects he designed), would etch
-in one plate the portraits of two treasures, glad to give “value”
-to the virtues of the one by juxtaposition with the virtues of the
-other; to oppose, say, the brilliant transparency of the rock-crystal
-ball to the texture, sombre and velvety, of the vase of ancient
-sardonyx. Of all these plates M. Louis Gonse has given an
-account, sufficiently detailed for most people’s purposes, in the <i>Gazette
-des Beaux-Arts</i> for 1876. The catalogue of Jacquemart’s etchings
-there contained was a work of industry and of very genuine interest
-on M. Gonse’s part, and its necessary extent, due to the artist’s own
-prodigious diligence in work, sufficiently excuses, for the time at least,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>an occasional incompleteness of description, making absolute identification
-sometimes a difficult matter. The critical appreciation was
-warm and intelligent, and the student of Jacquemart must always be
-indebted to Gonse. But for the quite adequate description of work
-like Jacquemart’s, there was needed not only the French tongue—the
-tongue of criticism—but a Gautier to use it. Only a critic whose
-intelligence gave form and definiteness to the impressions of senses
-preternaturally acute, could have given quite adequate expression to
-Jacquemart’s dealings with beautiful matter—to his easy revelry
-of colour and light over lines and contours of selected beauty. Everything
-that Jacquemart could do in the rendering of beautiful matter,
-and of its artistic and appropriate ornament, is represented in one or
-other of the varied subjects of the <i>Gemmes et Joyaux</i>, save only his
-work with delicate china. And the work represents his strength, and
-hardly ever betrays his weakness. He was never a thoroughly trained
-academical draughtsman. A large and detailed treatment of the nude
-figure—any further treatment of it than that required for the beautiful
-suggestion of it as it occurs on Renaissance mirror-frames or in
-Renaissance porcelains—might have found him deficient. He had
-a wonderful feeling for the unbroken flow of its line, for its suppleness,
-for the figure’s harmonious movement. Perhaps he was not the master
-of its most intricate anatomy; but, on the scale on which he had to
-treat it, his suggestion was faultless. By the brief shorthand of his
-art in this matter, we are brought back to the old formula of praise.
-Here, indeed, if anywhere—<i>Il n’y a rien, et il y a tout.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c011'>And as nothing in his etchings is more adroit than his treatment
-of the figure, so nothing is more delightful, and, as it were, unexpected.
-He feels the intricate unity of its curve and flow, how it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>gives value by its happy accidents of line to the fixed and invariable
-ornament of Renaissance decoration—an ornament as orderly as well-observed
-verse, with its settled form, its repetition, its refrain. I
-will mention two or three instances which seem the most notable.
-One of them occurs in the drawing of a Renaissance mirror—<i>Miroir
-Français du Seizième Siècle</i>—elaborately carved, but its chief grace,
-after all, is in its fine proportions; not so much in the perfection of
-the ornament as in the perfect disposition of it. The absolutely satisfactory
-filling of a given space with the enrichments of design, the
-occupation of the space without the crowding of it—for that is what
-is meant by the perfect disposition of ornament—has always been the
-problem for the decorative artist. Recent fashion has insisted, quite
-sufficiently, that it has been best solved by the Japanese; and they
-indeed have solved it, and sometimes with a singular economy of
-means, suggesting rather than achieving the occupation of the space
-they have worked upon. But the best Renaissance design has solved
-the problem quite as well, in fashions less arbitrary, with rhythm more
-pronounced, and yet more subtle, with a precision more exquisite, with
-a complete comprehension of the value of quietude, of the importance
-of rest. If it requires “an Athenian tribunal” to understand Ingres
-and Flaxman, it needs, at all events, some education in beautiful line
-to understand the art of Renaissance ornament. Such art Jacquemart
-of course understood absolutely, and against its ordered lines the free
-play of the nude figure is indicated with touches dainty, faultless, and
-few. Thus it is, I say, in the <i>Miroir Français du Seizième Siècle</i>. And
-to the attraction of the figure has been added almost the attraction of
-landscape and landscape atmosphere in the plate No. 27 of the <i>Gemmes
-et Joyaux</i>, representing scenes from Ovid, as an artist of the Renaissance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>had pourtrayed them on the delicate liquid surface of <i>cristal de
-roche</i>. And, not confining our examination wholly to the <i>Gemmes et
-Joyaux</i>—of which obviously the mirror just spoken of cannot form a
-part—we observe there or elsewhere in Jacquemart’s work how his
-treatment of the figure takes constant note of the material in which the
-first artist, his original, was working. Is it raised porcelain, for
-instance, or soft ivory, or smooth cold bronze, with its less close and
-subtle following of the figure’s curves, its certain measure of angularity
-in limb and trunk, its many facets, with somewhat marked transition
-from one to the other (instead of the unbroken harmony of the real
-figure), its occasional flatnesses? If it is this, this is what Jacquemart
-gives us in his etchings—not the figure only, but the figure as it
-comes to us through the medium of bronze. See, for instance,
-the <i>Vénus Marine</i>, lying half extended, with slender legs, long a
-possession of M. Thiers, I believe. You cannot insist too much on
-Jacquemart’s mastery over his material—<i>cloisonné</i>, with its many low
-tones, its delicate patterning outlined by metal ribs; the coarseness
-of rough wood, as in the <i>Salière de Troyes</i>; the sharp clear sword-blade,
-as the sword of François Premier, the signet’s flatness and
-delicate smoothness—<i>C’est le sinet du Roy Sant Louis</i>—and the red
-porphyry, flaked, as it were, and speckled, of an ancient vase, and the
-clear soft unctuous green of jade.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>And as the material is marvellously varied, so are its combinations
-curious and wayward. I saw, one autumn, at Lyons, the sombre
-little church of Ainay, a Christian edifice built of no Gothic stones,
-but placed, already ages ago, on the site of a Roman temple—the
-temple used, its dark columns cut across, its black stones rearranged,
-and so the church completed—Antiquity pressed into the service of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>the Middle Age. Jacquemart, dealing with the precious objects he
-had to pourtray, came often upon such strange meetings: an antique
-vase of sardonyx, say, infinitely precious, mounted and altered in the
-twelfth century for the service of the Mass, and so, beset with gold
-and jewels, offered by its possessor to the Abbey of Saint Denis.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It was not a literal imitation, it must be said again, that Jacquemart
-made of these things. These things sat to him for their portraits; he
-posed them; he composed them aright. Placed by him in their best
-lights, they revealed their finest qualities. He loved an effective
-contrast of them, a comely juxtaposition; a legitimate accessory he
-could not neglect—that window, by which he sat as he worked, flashed
-its light upon a surface that caught its reflection; in so many different
-ways the simple expedient helps the task, gives the object roundness,
-betrays its lustre. Some people bore hardly on him for the colour,
-warmth, and life he introduced into his etchings. They wanted a
-colder, a more impersonal, a more precise record. Jacquemart never
-sacrificed precision when precision was of the essence of the business,
-but he did not care for it for its own sake. And the thing that his
-first critics blamed him for doing—the composition of his subject, the
-rejection of this, the choice of that, the bestowal of fire and life upon
-matter dead to the common eye—is a thing which artists in all Arts
-have always done, and will always continue to do, and for this most
-simple reason, that the doing of it is Art.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Not very long after the <i>Gemmes et Joyaux</i> was issued, as we now
-have it, the life of Frenchmen was upset by the war. Schemes of work
-waited or were abandoned; at last men began, as a distinguished
-Frenchman at that time wrote to me, “to rebuild their existence out
-of the ruins of the past.” In 1873, Jacquemart, for his part, was at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>work again on his own best work of etching. The <i>Histoire de la Céramique</i>,
-a companion to the <i>Histoire de la Porcelaine</i>, was published in
-that year. To an earlier period (to 1868) belong the two exquisite
-plates of the light porcelain of Valenciennes, executed for Dr. Le
-Jeal’s monograph on the history of that fabric. And to 1866 belongs
-an etching already familiarly known to the readers of the <i>Gazette des
-Beaux-Arts</i> and to possessors of the first edition of <i>Etching and Etchers</i>—the
-Tripod—a priceless thing of jasper, set in golden carvings by
-Gouthière, and now lodged among the best treasures of the great
-house in Manchester Square.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But it is useless to continue further the chronicle of the triumphs
-that Jacquemart won in the translation, in his own free fashion of
-black and white, of all sorts of beautiful matter. Moreover, in 1873,
-the year of the issue of his last important series of plates, Jules
-Jacquemart, stationed at Vienna, as one of the jury of the International
-Exhibition there, caught a serious illness, a fever of the
-typhoid kind, and this left him a delicacy which he could never overcome;
-and thenceforth his work was limited. Where it was not a
-weariness, it had to be little but a recreation, a comparative pause.
-That was the origin of his performances in water colour, undertaken
-in the South, whither he repaired at each approach of winter. There
-remains, then, only to speak of these drawings and of such of his
-etched work as consisted in the popularisation of painted pictures. As
-a copyist of famous canvasses he found remunerative and sometimes
-fame-producing labour.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As an interpreter of other men’s pictures, it fell to the lot of
-Jacquemart, as it generally falls to the lot of professional engravers,
-to engrave the most different masters. But with so very personal an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>artist as he, the interpretation of so many men, and in so many years,
-from 1860, or thereabouts, onwards, could not possibly be always of
-equal value. Once or twice he was very strong in the reproduction of
-the Dutch portrait painters; but as far as Dutch painting is concerned,
-he is strongest of all when he interprets, as in one now celebrated
-etching, Jan van der Meer of Delft. <i>Der Soldat und das lachende
-Mädchen</i> was one of the most noteworthy pieces in the rich cabinet of
-M. Léopold Double. The big and somewhat blustering trooper
-common in Dutch Art, sits here engaging the attention of that
-pointed-faced, subtle, but vivacious maiden peculiar to Van der Meer.
-Behind the two, who are occupied in contented gazing and contented
-talk, is the bare sunlit wall, spread only with its map or chart—the
-Dutchman made his wall as instructive as Joseph Surface made his
-screen—and by the side of the couple, throwing its brilliant, yet modulated
-light on the woman’s face and on the background, is the intricately
-patterned window, the airy lattice. Rarely was a master’s
-subject or a master’s method better interpreted than in this print.
-Frans Hals once or twice is just as characteristically rendered. But
-with these exceptions it is Jacquemart’s own fellow-countrymen whom
-he renders the best. Seldom was finish so free from pettiness or the
-evidence of effort as it is in the <i>Défilé des populations lorraines devant
-l’Impératrice à Nancy</i>. <i>Le Liseur</i> is even finer—Meissonier again;
-this time a solitary figure, with bright, soft light from window at the
-side, as in the Van der Meer of Delft. The suppleness of Jacquemart’s
-talent—the happy speed of it, rather than its patient elaboration—is
-shown by his renderings of Greuze, the <i>Rêve d’amour</i>, a single head,
-and <i>L’Orage</i>, a sketchy picture of a young and frightened mother
-kneeling by her child exposed to the storm. Greuze, with his cajoling
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>art—which, if one likes, one must like without respecting—is entirely
-there. So, too, Fragonard, the whole ardent and voluptuous soul of
-him, in <i>Le Premier Baiser</i>. Labour it is possible to give in much
-greater abundance; but intelligence in interpretation cannot go any
-further or do anything more.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Between the etchings of Jacquemart and his water-colour drawings
-there is little affinity. The subjects of the one hardly ever recall the
-subjects of the other. The etchings and the water colours have but
-one thing in common—an extraordinary lightness of hand. Once,
-however, the theme is the same. Jacquemart etched some compositions
-of flowers; M. Gonse has praised them very highly: to me,
-elegant as they are, fragile of substance and dainty of arrangement,
-they seem inferior to that last-century flower-piece which we
-English are fortunate enough to know through the exquisite mezzotint
-of Earlom. But in the occasional water-colour painting of flowers—especially
-in the decorative disposition of them over a surface for
-ornament—Jacquemart is not easily surpassed; the lightness and
-suggestiveness of the work are almost equal to Fantin’s. A painted
-fan by Jacquemart, which is retained by M. Petit, the dealer, is dexterous,
-yet simple in the highest degree. The theme is a bough of the
-apple-tree, where the blossom is pink, white, whiter, then whitest
-against the air at the branch’s end.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But generally his water colour is of landscape, and a record
-of the South. Perhaps it is the sunlit and flower-bearing coast,
-his own refuge in winter weather. Perhaps, as in a drawing of M.
-May’s, it is the mountains behind Mentone—their conformation,
-colours, and tones, and their thin wreaths of mist—a drawing which
-M. May, himself an habitual mountaineer in those regions, assures
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>me is of the most absolute truth. Or, perhaps, as in another
-drawing in the same collection, it is a view of <i>Marseilles</i>; sketchy at
-first sight, yet with nothing unachieved that might have helped the
-effect; not the Marseilles, sunny and brilliant, parched and southern,
-of most men’s observation—the Marseilles even of the great observer,
-the Marseilles of <i>Little Dorrit</i>—but the busy port, with its ever-shifting
-life, under an effect less known; the Marseilles of an overcast
-morning: all its houses, its shipping and its quays, grey or green
-and steel-coloured. Such a work is a masterpiece, with the great
-quality of a masterpiece, that you cannot quickly exhaust the
-restrained wealth of its learned simplicity. To speak about it one
-technical word, we may say that while it belongs by its frank
-sketchiness to the earlier order of water-colour art, an art of rapid
-effect, as practised best by Dewint and David Cox, it belongs to the
-later order—to contemporary art—by its unhesitating employment of
-body colour.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The true source of the diversity of Jacquemart’s efforts, which I
-have now made apparent, is perhaps to be found in a vivacity of
-intellect, a continual alertness to receive all passing impressions. That
-alone makes a variety of interests easy and even necessary. That
-pushes men to express themselves in art of every kind, and to be
-collectors as well as artists, to possess as well as to create. Jacquemart
-inherited the passion of a collector; it was a queer thing that he
-set himself to collect. He was a collector of shoe-leather; foot-gear
-of every sort and of every time. His father, Albert Jacquemart, had
-held that to know the pottery of a nation was to know its history.
-Jules saw many histories, of life and travel, and the aims of travel, in
-the curious objects of his collection. Their ugliness—what would be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>to most of us the extreme distastefulness of them—did not repel him.
-Nor were his attentions devoted chiefly to the dainty slippers of a
-dancer—souvenirs, at all events, of the art of the ballet, very saleable
-at fancy fairs of the theatrical profession. He etched his own boots,
-tumbled out of the worst cupboard in the house. He looked at them
-with affection—<i>souvenirs de voyage</i>. The harmless eccentricity brings
-down, for a moment, to very ordinary levels, this watchful and
-exquisite artist, so devoted generally to high beauty, so keen to see it.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>What more would he have done had the forty-three years been
-greatly prolonged, a spell of life for further work accorded, Hezekiah-like,
-to a busy labourer upon whom Death had laid its first warning
-hand? We cannot answer the question, but it must have been much,
-so variously active was his talent, so fertile his resource. As it is,
-what may he hope to live by, now that the most invariably fatal of all
-forms of consumption, the most fatal while the least suspected, <i>la
-phthisie laryngée</i>, has arrested his effort? A very gifted, a singularly
-agile and supple translator of painters’ work, he may surely be
-allowed to be, and a water-colour artist, perfectly individual, yet
-hardly actually great; his strange dexterity of hand at the service of
-fact, not at the service of imagination. He recorded nature; he did
-not exalt or interpret it. But he interpreted Art. He was alive, more
-than any one has been alive before, to all the wonders that have been
-wrought in the world by the hands of artistic men.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c008' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>
- <h2 id='ch03' class='c009'>CHAPTER III.<br /> <br /><span class='c017'>J. A. M. WHISTLER</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>Years</span> ago James Whistler was a person of high promise: he has since
-been an artist often of agreeable and exquisite, though sometimes of
-incomplete and apparently wayward, performance. He has the misfortune
-to have been greatly known to a large public as the painter of
-his least desirable works, these having reached an easy notoriety,
-while the others have thus far too much escaped a general fame.
-Much of Mr. Whistler’s art has the interest of originality, and some of
-it the charm of beauty; and yet the measure of originality has at times
-been over-rated, through the innocent error of the budding amateur,
-who, in the earlier stage of his enlightenment, confuses the beginning
-with the end, accepts the intention for the adequate fulfilment,
-and exalts an adroit sketch into the rank of a permanent picture.
-<i>Mr. Irving as Philip of Spain</i>—three years ago at the Grosvenor—was
-a murky caricature of Velasquez; the master’s sketchiness
-remained, but his decisiveness was wanting. And in some of the
-<i>Nocturnes</i> the absence, not only of definition, but of gradation,
-would point to the conclusion that they are but engaging sketches.
-In them we look in vain for all the delicate differences of light and hue
-which the scenes depicted present. Like the landscape art of Japan,
-they are harmonious decorations, and a dozen or so of such engaging
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>sketches placed in the upper panels of a lofty apartment would afford
-a justifiable and welcome alternative even to noble tapestries or
-Morris wall-papers. But, on the large scale on which they are painted—a
-scale in which their well-considered sketchiness is carefully
-emphasized—it is in vain that we endeavour to receive them as cabinet
-pictures. They suffer curiously when placed against work not of
-course of petty and mechanical finish, but of patient achievement.
-But they have merits of their own; nor are their merits too common.
-So short a way have they proceeded into the complications of colour,
-that they avoid the incompatible: they avoid it cleverly; they say
-little to the mind, but they are restful to the eye, in their agreeable
-simplicity and limited suggestiveness. They are the record of impressions.
-So far as they go, they are right; nay, in one sense they are
-better than right, for they are charming.</p>
-<p class='c011'>And, moreover, there is evidence enough elsewhere that Mr.
-Whistler, confined to colour alone, can produce more various and
-more intricate harmonies than those of a <i>Nocturne</i> in silver and blue,
-than those of a <i>scherzo</i> in blue, or than those even in that fascinating
-portrait of Mrs. Meux, in which it was not so much the face as the
-figure and the movement that came to be deftly suggested, if hardly
-elaborately expressed. A great apartment in the house of Mr. Leyland,
-which Mr. Whistler has decorated, has shown that a long and
-concentrated effort at the solution of the problems of colour is not
-beyond the scope of an artist who has rarely mastered the subtleties of
-the intricate human form. It has shown, moreover, that his solution
-of such problems can be strikingly original. As a decorative painter—as
-a painter of large or brilliant sketches—Mr. Whistler has had few
-superiors in any time or land. His skill is sometimes genius here.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>Why, in the Grosvenor Gallery, the very year in which the irrepressible
-painter proffered the most unwelcome of his <i>Nocturnes</i>, there
-was a quite delightful picture, suggested, indeed, by Japanese Art, but
-itself not less subtle than the art which prompted it—<i>A Variation in
-Flesh-colour and Green</i>—bare-armed damsels of the farthest East,
-lounging in attitudes of agreeable abandonment in some balcony or
-court open to the genial sunlight and to the soft air. The damsels—they
-were not altogether meritorious. The draughtsmanship displayed
-in them was anything but “searching.” But the picture had a quality
-of cool refreshment such as the gentle colour and clean-shining material
-of Luca della Robbia affords to the beholder of Tuscan Art, as he
-comes upon Tuscan Art under Tuscan skies.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The interest of life—the interest of humanity—has confessedly
-occupied Mr. Whistler but little; yet in spite of his devotion to the art
-qualities of the peacock, it has not been given to him to be quite indifferent
-to the race to which he belongs. His portraits, sometimes,
-whatever may be his theories, have not been very obviously considered
-as arrangements of colour only for colour’s sake. They may
-even have profited by the adoption of hues such as suited their themes,
-and here Mr. Whistler may have delivered, through his language of
-colour, a message which some men would have intrusted to line alone.
-Anyhow he has been able to paint with admirable expressiveness a
-portrait of his mother, and to have recorded on a doleful canvas the
-head and figure of Carlyle, and in both, the simplicity and veracity of
-effect are things to be noted. Not indeed that the pictures are without
-mannerism: the straight and stiffish disposition of the lines in the first
-is not so much a merit as a peculiarity. But a certain dignified quietude
-and a certain reticent pathos are apparent in the portrait of the lady,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>and the rugged simplicity of Carlyle—a simplicity which his own
-generation received with so naive an admiration—is suggested not
-only with skill of hand, but with the mental skill that discovers quickly,
-in presence of a subject, wherein lies the best opportunity for high
-success in treating it.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But I take it to be admitted by those who do not conclude that the
-art is necessarily great which has the misfortune to be unacceptable,
-that it is not by his paintings so much as by his etchings that Mr.
-Whistler’s name may aspire to live. In painting, his success is
-infrequent and it is limited—though when it occurs, its very peculiarity
-gives us a keen relish for it—in etching, it is neither limited nor rare,
-though of course it is not uninterrupted nor unbroken. In painting,
-Mr. Whistler is an impressionist—he is an impressionist in etching,
-but etching permits the record of the impression only, while painting
-demands at all events the occasional capacity to realise with weeks of
-labour what a few hours might happily enough suggest. Moreover—and
-the circumstance is odd and noteworthy—it is in his etchings
-that Mr. Whistler has reached realisation the best, and he has reached
-it, in the earlier Thames-side work of twenty years ago, with no
-sacrifice whatever of freedom and of frankness in treatment. His
-best painting betrays something of that exquisite sensitiveness, that
-almost modern sensitiveness, to pleasurable juxtapositions of delicate
-colour which we admire in Orchardson, in Linton, and in Albert
-Moore; it betrays sometimes, as in a portrait of Miss Alexander, a deftness
-of brushwork, in the wave of a feather, in the curve of a hat, that
-recalls for a moment even the great names of Velasquez and of Gainsborough;
-and of high art qualities it betrays not much besides—though
-these, which are very rare, we are properly grateful for. But the etchings—that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>is indeed another matter. They must be considered in detail.
-No criticism is wasted that concerns itself carefully with them, and that
-points out from the many, which are fair, and which are exquisite, and
-which are flagrantly offensive.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>In some of his prints, Mr. Whistler makes good a claim to live by
-the side of the finest masters of the etching needle, and a familiarity
-with Rembrandt and with Méryon increases rather than lessens our
-interest in the American of to-day. But Mr. Whistler has etched too
-much for his reputation, or at least has published too much. No one
-who can look at work of Art fairly, demands that it shall be faultless;
-least of all can that be demanded of work of which the very virtue lies
-sometimes in its spontaneousness; but one has good reason to demand
-that the faults shall not outweigh the merits. Now in some of Mr.
-Whistler’s figure-pieces, executed with the etching-needle, and offered
-to the public indiscreetly, the commonness and vulgarity of the person
-pourtrayed find no apology in perfection of pourtrayal—the design is
-uncouth, the drawing is intolerable, the light and shade an affair of a
-moment’s impressiveness, with no subtlety of truth to hold the interest
-that is at first aroused. See, as one instance, the etching numbered 3
-in Mr. Thomas’s published catalogue—notice the size of the hands.
-And see again No. 56, in which the figure is one vast black triangle,
-in which there is apparently not a single quality which work of Art
-should have. The portraits of Becquet, the violoncello player, of one
-Mann, and of one Davis, have character, with no mannerism, but with
-a good simplicity of treatment. But neither face pourtrayed, nor Art
-pourtraying it, is of a kind to command a prolonged enjoyment. On
-the other hand, in some of the etchings or dry points, not, it seems,
-included in the catalogue, and in the refined and sensitive little etching
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>of <i>Fanny Leyland</i> there is apparent a distinct feeling for grace of contour—for
-the undulations of the figure and its softness of modelling.
-These are but the briefest sketches—they have a quality of their
-own. It is not ungenerous to suggest that carried further they might
-have failed. For the true genius of etching is in them as they are.
-As they are they have not failed.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Many have been the themes which, in the art of the aquafortist,
-Mr. Whistler has essayed. He has essayed landscape; he has drawn
-a tree in <i>Kensington Gardens</i>, and a tree in the foreground of the <i>Isle
-St. Louis, Paris</i>; but that tree at least seems of no known form of
-vegetable growth—it has the air of an exploding shell. Here and
-there—occupied with those juxtapositions of light and shade which
-fascinated the masters of Holland—Mr. Whistler has drawn interiors,
-and in one of his interiors we note a success second only to the
-very highest these Dutchmen attained. This is the interior described
-as <i>The Kitchen</i>. Only the finest, the most carefully printed impressions
-possess the full charm; but when such an impression presents
-itself to the eye, the Dutch masters, who have followed most keenly
-the glow and the gradation of light on chamber-walls, are seen
-to be almost rivalled. The kitchen is a long and narrow room, at the
-far end of which, away from the window and the keen light, stand
-artist and spectator. Farthest of all from them the light vine leaves
-are touched in with a grace that Adrian van Ostade—a master in this
-matter—would not have excelled. By the embrasure of the window,
-just before the great thickness of the wall, stands a woman, angular,
-uncomely, of homely build, busied with “household chares.” In front
-of her comes the sharp sunlight, striking the thick wall-side, and
-lessening as it advances into the shadow and gloom of the humble
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>room; wavering timidly on the plates of the dresser, in creeping half
-gleams which reveal and yet conceal the objects they fall upon. The
-meaningless scratch and scrawl of the bare floor in the foreground is
-the only fault that at all seriously tells against the charm of work
-otherwise beautiful and of keen sensitiveness; and the case is one in
-which the merit is so much the greater that the fault may well be ignored
-or its presence permitted. Again, <i>La Vieille aux Loques</i>—a weary
-woman of humblest fortunes and difficult life—shows, I think, that
-Mr. Whistler has now and then been inspired by the pathetic masters
-of Dutch Art.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>We have seen already that two things have much occupied Mr.
-Whistler—the arrangement of colours in their due proportions, the
-arrangement of light and shade. And the best results of the life-long
-study which, by his own account, he has given to the arrangement
-of colour are seen in the work that is purely, or the work that
-is practically, decorative—the work that escapes the responsibility
-of a subject. And the best results of the study of the arrangements
-of light and shade are seen in a dozen etchings, most of which—but
-not <i>The Kitchen</i> and not the <i>Vieille aux Loques</i>—belong to that
-series in which the artist has recorded for our curious pleasure the
-common features of the shores of the Thames. Here also there
-is evident his feeling, not exactly for beauty, but at all events for
-quaintness of form, for form that has character. It had occurred to
-no one else to draw with realistic fidelity the lines of wharf and warehouse
-along the banks of the river; to note down the pleasant oddities
-of outline presented by roof and window and crane; to catch the
-changes of the grey light as it passed over the front of Wapping. Mr.
-Whistler’s figure-drawing, generally defective and always incomplete,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>has prevented him from seizing every characteristic of the sailor-figures
-that people the port. The absence, seemingly, of any power
-such as the great marine painters had, of drawing the forms of water,
-whether in a broad and wind-swept tidal river or on the high seas, has
-narrowed and limited again the means by which Mr. Whistler has
-depicted the scenes “below Bridge.” But his treatment of these
-scenes is none the less original and interesting. By wise omission,
-he has managed often to retain the sense of the flow of water or its
-comparative stillness. Its gentle lapping lifts the keels of the now
-emptied boats of his <i>Billingsgate</i>. It lies lazy under the dark warehouses
-of his <i>Free Trade Wharf</i>. It frets and flickers and divides in
-pleasant light against the woodwork of the bridge in the larger <i>Putney</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The limitations of Mr. Whistler’s art are very conspicuous in a
-more recent experiment than the original Thames-side series—the
-series of <i>Venice</i>. So evident, indeed, are they in that set that the set
-has been undervalued by many amateurs of taste, who have exacted too
-much that Mr. Whistler should give them, not what he was best able
-to see in Venice, but what cultivated readers of Art history have been
-most accustomed to see there. The Venice series is in the etcher’s
-later manner—a style in which ever-increasing reliance is placed on
-the faculty of slight and suggestive sketching. Now etching, even
-when practised with the greatest possible union of fidelity and
-freshness, is hardly the appropriate medium for conveying the charm
-of delicate architecture. Of such architecture Méryon himself only
-now and then essayed to give the charm, and he essayed it, deliberately,
-at the cost of abandoning not a little of the etcher’s freedom—he
-became, for the nonce at least, a “great original engraver;” he took
-his art beyond its habitual bounds. His triumph justified him.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>But Mr. Whistler, even in his earlier manhood, when those of the
-Thames etchings which are the fullest of detail were wrought with
-sureness and precision of hand, never betrayed either the capacity or
-the will to reproduce the charm of delicate architecture. Yet in an
-art to which colour is denied, the charm of delicate architecture must
-be the charm of Venice. It remained, however, for Mr. Whistler
-to see whether the place had yet some aspects which his etching
-could record—an impression, not a reproduction: that was all that
-could be looked for. And Mr. Whistler etched his impressions with
-curious uncertainty and curious inequality. He was now adroit, now
-wavering. He took from London to Venice his happy fashion of
-suggesting lapping water. He looked at Venice as a whole, keenly,
-delicately, but never in detail—we had bird’s-eye views of it. It had
-been interesting to wonder what would be the vision granted to a
-fantastic genius of a fantastic city. Well, little new came of it, in
-etching—nothing new that was beautiful. Afterwards, in a series of
-pastels, it became clear who it was that had seen Venice. It was
-Mr. Whistler the exquisite colourist, not the exquisite etcher.</p>
-
-<div id='i036' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i036.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Whistler’s fame as an aquafortist, then, rests chiefly still on
-his Thames-side work; and, even there, less on the faint agreeable
-sketches done of later years, though these have their charm, like the
-better of his painted <i>Nocturnes</i>, than on the work of his first maturity.
-The <i>London Bridge</i> and the <i>Free Trade Wharf</i> and one or two
-<i>Putneys</i>—one of them is in this book—may be named, however, among
-the happiest examples of the later art that is specially brief in
-recording an impression. The spring of the great arch in <i>London
-Bridge</i>, as seen from below, from the water-side, is rendered, it seems,
-with a suggestion of power in great constructive work, such as is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>little visible in the tender handling of so many of the prints of the
-river. The <i>Free Trade Wharf</i> is a very exquisite study of gradations
-of tone and of the receding line of murky buildings that follows the
-bend of the stream. It is, in its best printed impressions, a thing of
-faultless delicacy. A third river-piece, not lately done, has been
-rather lately retouched—the <i>Billingsgate: Boats at a Mooring</i>. In the
-retouch is an instance of the successful treatment of a second “state”
-or even a later “state” of the plate, and such as should be a warning
-to the collector who buys “first states” of everything—the <i>Liber
-Studiorum</i> included—and “first states” alone, with dull determination.
-Of course the true collector knows better: he knows that the
-impression is almost all, and the “state” next to nothing, except as
-indicating what is probable as to the condition of the plate, and he
-must gradually and painfully acquire the eye to judge of the
-impression.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A few years ago Mr. Whistler retouched his <i>Billingsgate</i> for the proprietors
-of the <i>Portfolio</i>, and the proof impressions of the state issued
-by them reach the highest excellence of which the plate has been
-capable. Not sheltering itself under the extreme simplicity and singleness
-of aim kept so adroitly in the <i>Free Trade Wharf</i> and in the
-<i>London Bridge</i>, it falls into faults which these avoid. The ghostliness
-of the foreground figures demands an ingenious theory for its
-justification, and this theory no one has advanced. But the solidity of
-the buildings introduced into this plate—the clock-tower and the houses
-upon the quay—are a rare achievement in etching. For once the
-houses are not drawn, but built, like the houses and the churches
-and the bridges of Méryon. The strength of their realisation lends
-delicacy to the thin-masted fishing boats with their yet thinner lines of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>cordage, and to the distant bridge in the grey mist of London, and to
-the faint clouds of the sky. Perhaps yet more delicate than the <i>Billingsgate</i>
-is the <i>Hungerford Bridge</i>, so small, yet, in a fine proof, so
-spacious and airy. It lacks substance, of course, and solidity—and so
-does the impression of landscape in a dream.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Finally, there are the <i>Thames Police</i>, the <i>Tyzack Whiteley</i>, and the
-<i>Black Lion Wharf</i>. These, which were executed a score of years
-since, are the most varied and complete studies of quaint places now
-disappearing—nay, many of them already disappeared—of places
-with no beauty that is very old or very graceful, but with interest to
-the every-day Londoner and interest, too, to the artist. Here are small
-warehouses falling to pieces, or poorly propped even when they were
-sketched, and vanished now to make room for a vaster and duller
-uniformity of storehouse front. Here are narrow dwelling-houses of
-our Georgian days, with here a timber facing and there a quaint bow
-window, many-paned—narrow houses of sea-captains, or the riverside
-tradesfolk, or of custom-house officials, the upper classes of the Docks
-and the East-end. These too have been pressed out of the way by the
-aggressions of great commerce, and the varied line that they presented
-has ceased to be. Of all these riverside features, <i>Thames Police</i> is an
-illustration interesting to-day and valuable to-morrow. And <i>Black
-Lion Wharf</i> is yet fuller of happy accident of outline and happy gradation
-of tone, studied amongst common things which escape the
-common eye.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is a pleasure to possess such faithful and spirited records of a
-departing quaintness, and it is an achievement to have made them.
-It would be a pity to remove the grace from the achievement by
-insisting that, as in <i>Nocturne</i> and <i>Arrangement</i>, the art was burdened
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>by a here unnecessary theory; that the study of the “arrangement of line
-and form” was all, and the interest of the association nothing. When
-Dickens was tracing the fortunes of Quilp on Tower Hill, and on that
-dreary night when the little monster fell from the wharf into the river,
-he did not think only of the cadence of his sentences, or his work would
-never have lived, or lived only with the lovers of curious patchwork of
-mere words. Perhaps, without his knowing it, some slight imaginative
-interest in the lives of Londoners prompted Mr. Whistler, or strengthened
-his hand, as he recorded the shabbiness that has a history, the
-slums of the eastern suburb, and the prosaic service of the Thames.
-Here, and often elsewhere, his work, if it has shown some faults to be
-forgiven, has shown, in excellence, qualities that fascinate. The Future
-will forget his failures, to which in the Present there has somehow been
-accorded, through the activity of friendship or the activity of enmity, a
-publicity rarely bestowed upon failures at all; but it will remember the
-success of work that is peculiar and personal. These best things we
-have dwelt upon are not to be denied that length of days which is the
-portion of exquisite Art.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c008' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>
- <h2 id='ch04' class='c009'>CHAPTER IV.<br /> <br /><span class='c017'>ALPHONSE LEGROS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>Any</span> generation since the brilliant times of Art—since the sixteenth
-century in Italy, the seventeenth in Holland, the eighteenth in England
-and in France—has had to deem itself fortunate if it has produced
-three or four artists of individuality united with large attainment; and
-it is much to be surmised that no generation will have greater cause
-than our own to think it has done well if it has produced even as many.
-Notorieties of the moment may always be counted by the score, but
-fame remains so rarely for the most popular, that the serious student of
-the work of a master in any art has no reason to question his own
-judgment when it points him to admiration, merely because the object
-of his admiration is not to be counted among the immediate successes
-of the hour. Legros is not an immediate success. He has worked for
-five-and-twenty years, and there are intelligent people who see little in
-his pictures beyond their first ugliness. Each to his taste—we cannot
-always blame them; and Legros has been ugly sometimes gratuitously,
-sometimes with wantonness. But Legros is also a very grave and
-enduring master, whose work is now full of mistake, and now of
-power, and now again is certainly touched with that higher and keener
-faculty we call inspiration.</p>
-<p class='c011'>The etchings of Legros range already, however, over a period of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>seven-and-twenty years; and that he began so young, and at a time
-when etching was not popular and the art had not become a trade, is a
-proof at least of the spontaneity of his pursuit of it. By temperament
-and instinct he was as much etcher as painter, perhaps even more. The
-process of etching being—always in skilled hands, of course—perhaps
-the readiest for the rendering of impressions and the expression of artistic
-thought, it is natural that Legros, whose art, whatever it may lack in
-immediate attractiveness, is one undoubtedly of impressions and of
-thoughts, should have turned to this process. And so well, indeed,
-has he increased his command of it—always with reference to his own
-particular business, to the order of impressions it is his own task to
-convey—that, though there are, indeed, several of his paintings which
-have the qualities of a master’s work, we get the best of him in his
-etchings. Great is the technical progress he has made in these since
-some of the first plates catalogued so well by M. Poulet-Malassis and
-Mr. Thibaudeau, but it is not to be imagined that the progress has
-been uninterrupted. Incompleteness and uncertainty are still likely
-to be visible. His execution, skilful at one time, and entirely
-responsive to his desire, is at another time halting, wayward, insufficiently
-controlled and directed. Therefore, though, as I say, the
-execution is not seldom excellent—economical of means and yet rich
-in the possession of various means—it would rarely be in itself the
-occasion of attracting notice to his work. With Legros, it is the
-conception that dominates. The conception is often such as recalls
-the highest achievements of Art.</p>
-
-<div id='i042' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i042.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>But the imagination of Legros, in virtue of which, quite as much
-as by occasional mannerisms of handling, he recalls that older and
-more pregnant Art which has well nigh passed from the very ken of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>the producers of our own day’s trivial array, is not in any sense
-derived from this or that past master; it is charged, on the contrary,
-in his most considerable pieces with a serious and pathetic poetry
-quite his own. Here and there, indeed, as in one early work—<i>Procession
-dans les Caveaux de Saint-Médard</i>—it is not imagination at
-all, as that is generally understood, but the keen observation of an
-artist content to reproduce, that alone is remarkable; and here there
-is a certain amount of audacity in the fidelity with which he has
-rendered the commonplace, the mean, the narrow faces of a certain
-section of the Parisian lower <i>bourgeoisie</i> engaged in devotions which
-there is no beauty of form or of thought to make interesting to
-the beholder. It is a piece of pure realism—the hideous flounces
-and more hideous crinolines, the squat figures, the slop-shop
-fashions, the common faces empty of records. And in this pure and
-unrelieved realism there is a certain value, if there is no charm.
-But the pieces to which Legros will owe such fame as the better-judging
-connoisseurs and critics shall eventually accord him are
-those in which the artistic instinct and desire of beauty, either of
-form or of thought, has found some expression. It will be in
-part by such masculine, yet refined and graceful, portraits as
-those of M. Dalou and Mr. Poynter, such subtle ones as that of
-Cardinal Manning, such pathetic ones as that of M. Rodin here,
-that Legros will stand high. It will be in part by the etchings
-in which the pourtrayal of actual life has been guided by the
-research for beauty, as, for instance, in the <i>Chœur d’une Eglise
-Espagnole</i>, where not only is the head firm and dignified and the
-lighting more intricate than is usual with this master, but where the
-composition of bent figure and curved violoncello is of great repose
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>and refinement of beauty. A more various specimen of the same
-type is to be found in a fine impression of <i>Les Chantres Espagnols</i>.
-They are eight in the choir of a church—four sit in the stalls, the
-others stand, of whom one turns the page of a missal placed on a
-lectern. The scene is mostly dark—mostly even very dark—but the
-light, by a very skilled treatment of it, falls here and there on lectern,
-missal, and hand of the old man sitting in the choir. The observation
-of reality in this plate has been at the same time keen and poetical,
-for nothing can be truer and nothing more impressive than the study
-of old faces out of which so much of the desire of life has gone, and
-the study of gestures which are those of hand and will waxing feeble.
-Two men, at least, are placed together in a pathetic harmony of
-weakness: the drooping hand of one and his drooped head, as he
-sits in his long-accustomed place; the open mouth of the other—his
-mouth opened with the feebleness of a decayed intelligence, with the
-slow understandings of a departing mind. Or, not to insist too much
-on a picturesqueness in which pathos predominates, notice, when the
-occasion presents itself, the first rendering of the subject known as
-the <i>Lutrin</i>, with its acolyte of rare youthful dignity; or as an example
-of work in which some little beauty of modelling has been sought to
-be united even with every-day realism, see the design of the bare knee
-in <i>L’Enfant Prodigue</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But where Legros is most apart and alone is, after all, in the subjects
-which owe most to the imagination, and of these the very finest
-are <i>La Mort du Vagabond</i>, <i>La Mort et le Bûcheron</i>, and <i>Le Savant
-endormi</i>. Something of the art that gives interest to these pieces is
-contained in the careful persistence with which the etcher brings the
-realism of physical ugliness into close contact and contrast with the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>spiritual and supernatural. A comely and well-to-do youth slumbering
-in his chair at the Marlborough could have no dreams an artist of
-Legros’s nature would think worthy of recording, but the ugly votary
-of science and intellectual speculation, who sleeps, from sheer weariness,
-in the armchair before which are still the implements of his study and
-research, has the dignity of strained endeavour; and M. Legros,
-in pourtraying him and suggesting the subjects of his dream, has
-reached an elevation which separates him from most of his contemporaries,
-by as much as the <i>Melancholia</i> of Dürer is separated from the
-<i>Melancholia</i> of Beham. <i>La Mort du Vagabond</i> is not a whit less suggestive
-in its contrast between the feebleness of the worn-out beggar
-now stretched out lonely on the pathside—his head raised, gasping,
-and his hat knocked away—and the force and fury of the storm that
-beats over dead tree and desolate common. The unity of tragic
-impression in homely life, preserved in this plate, will give it a permanent
-value among the great things of Art. <i>La Mort et le Bûcheron</i> is
-more tender, not more nor less poetical, but less weird; and nothing
-short of a high and vigorous imagination could have saved from
-chance of ridicule, in days in which the symbolical has long ceased to
-be an habitual channel of expression, this etching of the veiled skeleton
-of Death appearing to the old man still busy with his field-work, and
-beckoning him gently, while he, with simple and ignorant yet not
-insensitive face, touched with awe and surprise, looks up under a
-sudden spell it is vain to hope to cast off, since for him, however unexpectedly,
-the hour has plainly come. Of this very fascinating subject,
-there exist impressions from two different plates: one of the plates, and
-in some respects the better and more pathetic one—the one in which
-the figure of Death is gentler and more persuasive, and in which the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>face of the woodman is the more mildly expressive—having suffered an
-accident after only about a dozen impressions had been taken from it.
-The second was then executed, with something less at first than the
-success of the earlier one, so that the almost unique and very rare
-impressions of the plate—whatever may chance to be their money
-value—represent it to the least advantage. It was retouched and
-retouched, and at length with more of reward for the trouble than
-Legros has generally been able to meet with when laboriously modifying
-his work in the attempt to realise his conception more fully; until
-at last the enterprising management of <i>L’Art</i> was enabled to offer its
-readers for about three shillings a work of art not rare, indeed, but of
-exquisite beauty. The success of the first plate, which the acid had
-covered in a moment of neglect, had been almost refound.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A final word about the landscapes. As a painter of landscape
-M. Legros is little known, but there exist, I believe, in London one or
-two considerable collections of water colours which exhibit almost
-exclusively his art in landscape. As far as the etchings show it at all,
-it is of the most account when it is called in for the accompaniment of
-one of those impressive and doleful ditties I have just been speaking
-of. Sometimes, however, it is good without this mission and significance,
-as in the <i>Pécheur</i>, where a delicate effect of early morning is
-given with exquisite refinement. But at other times, in which the
-artist is dealing with landscape charged for him with no especial
-meaning, his very observation of it seems to have been lacking in
-interest and acuteness, as in the broad slope of grass by the stream-side
-in his big print <i>Les Bûcherons</i>—a whole surface of ground that is
-treated mechanically and without any worthy apprehension. And yet
-this print, despite certain unpleasantness, contains in the heads of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>woodcutters some of his finest work. A much more sketchy subject,
-<i>Paysage aux Meules</i>, has greater unity of impression. Like a good deal
-of Legros’s landscape, it is distinctively French, this particular
-glimpse of field and farm and rounded hill reminding one of the
-wide-stretching uplands of the Haut Boulognais. Other landscapes
-are of England. Others, again, are neither of England nor of France,
-nor of any land which may be read of in the guide-book or visited
-by the enterprising tourist, but of that land alone that rises in the
-imagination of artistic men.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c008' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>
- <h2 class='c009'>INDEX.</h2>
-</div>
-<ul class='index c008'>
- <li class='c020'><span class='sc'>Bracquemond.</span> His originality and limitation, p. <a href='#Page_iii'>iii</a>.</li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Claude.</span> His <i>Bouvier</i> and <i>Shepherd and Shepherdess conversing</i>, p. <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>.</li>
- <li class='c020'><span class='sc'>Crome.</span> His etchings, p. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Earlom.</span> His flower-pieces in mezzotint, p. <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>.</li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Gonse.</span> His catalogue of Jacquemart’s etchings, p. <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>.</li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Haden.</span> His quality of vigour, p. <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>his judgment of Méryon, p. <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>;</li>
- <li>his earliest etchings, p. <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Mytton Hall</i>, p. <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Egham</i>, p. <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Water Meadow</i>, p. <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Calais Pier</i>, p. <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Penton Hook</i>, p. <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Sunset on the Thames</i>, p. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Erith Marshes</i>, p. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Agamemnon</i>, p. <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Sawley Abbey</i>, p. <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Dusty Millers</i>, p. <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>;</li>
- <li>his Dorsetshire etchings, p. <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c020'><span class='sc'>Hamerton</span>, p. iii. and p. <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>.</li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Jacquemart.</span> His happy circumstances, p. <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>he renders the soul of matter, p. <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>;</li>
- <li>his etchings of Oriental and <i>Sèvres</i> porcelain, p. <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Brocca Italienne</i>, p. <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Vase de Vieux Vincennes</i>, p. <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Miroir Français</i>, p. <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Vénus Marine</i>, p. <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Salière de Troyes</i>, p. <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>;</li>
- <li>his etchings after pictures, p. <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>;</li>
- <li>his flower-pieces, p. <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>;</li>
- <li>his work in water colour, p. <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>;</li>
- <li>his concern with Art, not nature, p. <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Legros.</span> Essentially an etcher, p. <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>his <i>Procession dans les Caveaux de Saint-Médard</i>, p. <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Dalou</i>, p. <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Poynter</i>, p. <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Manning</i>, p. <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Rodin</i>, p. <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Les Chantres Espagnols</i>, p. <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Le Lutrin</i>, p. <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>;</li>
- <li><i>La Mort du Vagabond</i>, p. <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>;</li>
- <li><i>La Mort et le Bûcheron</i>, p. <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>;</li>
- <li>his etched landscapes, p. <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Macbeth</span>, p. iii.</li>
- <li class='c020'><span class='sc'>Méryon.</span> His method with architecture, p. <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>.</li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Rembrandt.</span> His <i>Ephraim Bonus</i> and <i>Clément de Jonghe</i>, p. <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>his <i>Portrait of a woman lightly etched</i>, p. <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Thibaudeau.</span> His catalogue of Legros’s etchings, p. <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>.</li>
- <li class='c020'><span class='sc'>Tissot</span>, p. iii.</li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Vandyke.</span> A decisive sketcher, p. <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>.</li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Whistler.</span> His quality of exquisiteness, p. <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>his decorative arrangements, p. <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>;</li>
- <li>painted portraits, p. <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>;</li>
- <li>his etched portraits, p. <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Fanny Leyland</i>, p. <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>;</li>
- <li><i>The Kitchen</i>, p. <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>;</li>
- <li><i>La Vieille aux Loques</i>, p. <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>;</li>
- <li>his <i>Venice</i> series, p. <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Free Trade Wharf</i>, p. <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Billingsgate</i>, p. <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Hungerford Bridge</i>, p. <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Thames Police</i>, p. <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Tyzack Whiteley</i>, p. <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>;</li>
- <li><i>Black Lion Wharf</i>, p. <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
-</ul>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c008' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span><span class='small'>LONDON</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>PRINTED BY J. S. VIRTUE AND CO., LIMITED,</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>CITY ROAD.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c008'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>OTHER WORKS BY MR. WEDMORE.</div>
- <div class='c000'>7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> EACH.</div>
- <div class='c008'>STUDIES IN ENGLISH ART.</div>
- <div class='c000'>GAINSBOROUGH, MORLAND, REYNOLDS, FLAXMAN, STOTHARD,</div>
- <div>CROME, COTMAN, TURNER, CONSTABLE, DE WINT, DAVID COX,</div>
- <div>CRUIKSHANK.</div>
- <div class='c000'><i>Two Volumes.</i> <span class='sc'>Second Edition.</span></div>
- <div class='c008'>THE MASTERS OF GENRE PAINTING.</div>
- <div class='c000'>REMBRANDT, DE HOOGH, NICHOLAS MAES, METSU, TERBURG,</div>
- <div>JAN STEEN, WATTEAU, LANCRET, PATER, CHARDIN, FRAGONARD,</div>
- <div>HOGARTH, and WILKIE.</div>
- <div class='c000'><i>With Sixteen Illustrations.</i></div>
- <div class='c008'>PASTORALS OF FRANCE.</div>
- <div class='c000'>“A LAST LOVE AT PORNIC,” “YVONNE OF CROISIC,” “THE FOUR</div>
- <div>BELLS OF CHARTRES.”</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='sc'>Second Edition.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c008' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c008'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span><i>ETCHINGS</i></div>
- <div class='c000'>ON SALE BY THE FINE ART SOCIETY.</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='sc'>By</span> FRANCIS SEYMOUR HADEN.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table2' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='76%' />
-<col width='7%' />
-<col width='7%' />
-<col width='7%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c013'>£.</td>
- <td class='c013'><i>s.</i></td>
- <td class='c015'><i>d.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>A By-road in Tipperary</td>
- <td class='c013'>6</td>
- <td class='c013'>6</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>A Water Meadow</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Amalfi</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>11</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Amstelodam</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>11</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>A Cottage Window</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>12</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Battersea</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Breaking up of the Agamemnon. First State £7 7 0 Second State</td>
- <td class='c013'>5</td>
- <td class='c013'>5</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Barque Refitting</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Brentford Ferry</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>12</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>By Inveraron</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Brig at Anchor</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Cottages behind Horsley’s House</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Cranbrook</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Cardigan Bridge</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>12</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Combe Bottom</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Calais Pier. Second State</td>
- <td class='c013'>21</td>
- <td class='c013'>0</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Do. Small</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>11</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Dusty Millers</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Evening</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Early Morning—Richmond Park</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>12</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Egham</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Egham Lock</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Erith Marshes</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Fulham</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>12</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Greenwich</td>
- <td class='c013'>8</td>
- <td class='c013'>8</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Grim Spain—Burgos</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>House of the Smith</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>12</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Hic Terminus Hæret</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>11</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Horsley’s House at Willesley</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Kensington Gardens. The Large Plate £2 12 6 Small Plate</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Kew Side</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>12</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'><span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>Kilgaren Castle</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>12</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Kenarth</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>12</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Kidwelly Town</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Mount’s Bay</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Newcastle in Emlyn</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>12</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>O Laborum!</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>11</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Out of Study Window</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>On the Test. First State</td>
- <td class='c013'>5</td>
- <td class='c013'>5</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Purfleet</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Penton Hook</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Puff Asleep</td>
- <td class='c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c013'>—</td>
- <td class='c015'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Railway Encroachment</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Ruins in Wales</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>11</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Sub Tegmine</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Sonning Almshouses</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Shepperton</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Shere Millpond</td>
- <td class='c013'>5</td>
- <td class='c013'>5</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Sunset on the Thames. First State £3 3 0 Second State</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Sketch on Back of Zinc Plate</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>11</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Sunset in Ireland</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Sonning</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Study of Stems</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>11</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Twickenham Bushes</td>
- <td class='c013'>0</td>
- <td class='c013'>10</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Mill-Wheel. First State £3 3 0 Second State</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Thomas Haden of Derby</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Thames Fishermen</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Herd</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Two Sheep</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>11</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Holly Field</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Twickenham Church</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Towing-Path. First State £4 4 0 Second State</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Three Sisters</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Inn at Sawley. (Unfinished)</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Grande Chartreuse. (From Drawing by Turner)</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Moat House</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Two Asses</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>11</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Turkish Bath, with One Figure</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>12</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Turkish Bath, with Two Figures</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Assignation</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Thames Ditton</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Willow Bank</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Windmill Hill</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Windsor</td>
- <td class='c013'>8</td>
- <td class='c013'>8</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Ye Compleate Angler</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>Yacht Tavern, Erith</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'><span class='sc'>The Volume of “Études”</span></td>
- <td class='c013'>36</td>
- <td class='c013'>15</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c008' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c008'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span><span class='sc'>By J. A. McN. WHISTLER.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c021'><i>VENICE.</i> <span class='sc'>A Series of Twelve Etchings.</span></p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>Limited to 100 Sets, 50 Guineas the Set; or separately as follows:—</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table3' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='74%' />
-<col width='8%' />
-<col width='8%' />
-<col width='8%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Little Venice</td>
- <td class='c013'>£4</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Two Doorways</td>
- <td class='c013'>6</td>
- <td class='c013'>6</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Beggars</td>
- <td class='c013'>8</td>
- <td class='c013'>8</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Nocturne</td>
- <td class='c013'>5</td>
- <td class='c013'>5</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Doorway</td>
- <td class='c013'>8</td>
- <td class='c013'>8</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The River</td>
- <td class='c013'>5</td>
- <td class='c013'>5</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Little Mast</td>
- <td class='c013'>5</td>
- <td class='c013'>5</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Little Lagoon</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Palaces</td>
- <td class='c013'>8</td>
- <td class='c013'>8</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Mast</td>
- <td class='c013'>5</td>
- <td class='c013'>5</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Traghetto</td>
- <td class='c013'>8</td>
- <td class='c013'>8</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>The Piazzetta</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c013'>4</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<hr class='c022' />
-<p class='c021'><i>SIXTEEN THAMES ETCHINGS.</i></p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>Price 14 Guineas the Set in Portfolio; or separately as follows—</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table3' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='74%' />
-<col width='8%' />
-<col width='8%' />
-<col width='8%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>1. Black Lion Wharf</td>
- <td class='c013'>£1</td>
- <td class='c013'>15</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>2. Wapping Wharf</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>11</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>3. The Forge</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>4. Old Westminster Bridge</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>5</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>5. Wapping</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>12</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>6. Old Hungerford</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>11</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>7. The Pool</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>11</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>8. The Fiddler</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>11</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>9. The Limeburners</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c013'>2</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>10. The Little Pool</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>5</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>11. Eagle Wharf</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>15</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>12. Limehouse</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>11</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>13. Thames Warehouses</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>5</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>14. Millbank</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>5</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>15. Early Morning (Battersea)</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c013'>1</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>16. Chelsea Bridge and Church</td>
- <td class='c013'>0</td>
- <td class='c013'>10</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<hr class='c022' />
-<table class='table4' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='74%' />
-<col width='8%' />
-<col width='8%' />
-<col width='8%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'><i>THE LITTLE LIMEHOUSE.</i> One Hundred Proofs Only</td>
- <td class='c013'>£1</td>
- <td class='c013'>11</td>
- <td class='c015'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c015'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'><i>HURLINGHAM.</i> Sixty Artist’s Proofs</td>
- <td class='c013'>£3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c015'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'><i>FULHAM.</i> Sixty Artist’s Proofs</td>
- <td class='c013'>£3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c015'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'><i>PUTNEY.</i> Sixty Artist’s Proofs</td>
- <td class='c013'>£3</td>
- <td class='c013'>3</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c015'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'><i>PUTNEY BRIDGE.</i> Proofs</td>
- <td class='c013'>£6</td>
- <td class='c013'>6</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c015'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c016'><i>BATTERSEA BRIDGE.</i> Proofs</td>
- <td class='c013'>£6</td>
- <td class='c013'>6</td>
- <td class='c015'>0</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<hr class='c022' />
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c008' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c008'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span><span class='sc'>By SAMUEL PALMER.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c023'><i>THE LONELY TOWER.</i> From “Il Penseroso.”</p>
-<hr class='c024' />
-<p class='c025'><i>THE HERDSMAN’S COTTAGE</i> (1850). Plate destroyed.</p>
-<hr class='c024' />
-<p class='c025'><i>THE BELLMAN.</i> From “Il Penseroso” (1879). Sixty Remarque
- Proofs (of which few remain unsold) £4 4 0</p>
-
-<p class='c026'> Plain Impressions 2 2 0</p>
-<hr class='c024' />
-<p class='c025'><i>THE SKYLARK</i> (1850). Plate destroyed £4 4 0</p>
-<hr class='c024' />
-<p class='c025'><i>CHRISTMAS; or, Folding the Last Sheep.</i> From Bampfylde’s
- “Sonnet” (1850). A few Fine Proofs £3 3 0</p>
-<hr class='c024' />
-<p class='c025'><i>THE WILLOW</i> (1850). Mr. Palmer’s First Etching £0 10 6</p>
-<hr class='c024' />
-<p class='c025'><i>THE SLEEPING SHEPHERD.</i> Plate destroyed £4 4 0</p>
-<hr class='c024' />
-<p class='c025'><i>EARLY MORNING—Opening the Fold.</i> Remarque Proofs all
- sold. Artist’s Proofs £2 2 0</p>
-<hr class='c024' />
-<p class='c025'><i>THE VINE.</i> Two Subjects on one Plate. Plate destroyed £5 5 0</p>
-<hr class='c024' />
-<p class='c025'><i>THE EARLY PLOUGHMAN</i> £2 2 0</p>
-<hr class='c024' />
-<p class='c025'><i>THE HERDSMAN.</i> Plate destroyed £6 6 0</p>
-<hr class='c024' />
-<p class='c025'><i>THE MORNING OF LIFE.</i> Plate destroyed £5 5 0</p>
-<hr class='c024' />
-<p class='c025'><i>THE RISING MOON.</i> Plate destroyed £5 5 0</p>
-<hr class='c027' />
-<p class='c028'><i>In addition to these, a large number of examples of Etchings
-by J. C. Hook, R.A., Rajon, Flameng, Unger, Gaillard, Waltner,
-Brunet-Debaines, F. Bracquemond, Jacquemart, Chifflart, Daubigny,
-Le Rat, Veyrassat, Appian, Tissot, Legros, Herkomer, &amp;c., &amp;c.</i></p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c008' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c008'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span><i>ART BOOKS</i></div>
- <div class='c000'>PUBLISHED BY THE FINE ART SOCIETY.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-<p class='c025'><span class='sc'>Note.</span>—The rule of the Society in publishing Books is to
-make an issue sufficient only to meet the demand at the time of
-publication. By so doing they find the subscribers are materially
-benefited, as their books quickly increase in value.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c025'><i>Mr. Ruskin’s Notes on his Turner Drawings.</i> Exhibited at
-The Fine Art Society’s Galleries, 1878. Illustrated Large-paper
-Edition, consisting of 750 copies. Published £2 2<i>s.</i>
-Edition exhausted. A copy sold at Christie’s, in April, 1881, for
-£4 4<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c026'>The same, small paper, unillustrated, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i><a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c018'><sup>[2]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c026'>The type of these editions has been distributed.</p>
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c025'><i>Mr. Ruskin’s Notes on Samuel Prout and William Hunt.</i> In
-illustration of a Loan Collection of Drawings exhibited at The
-Fine Art Society’s Galleries in 1879. Edition nearly exhausted.
-Large Paper, Illustrated Edition, consisting of 500 copies, £2
-2<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c026'>The same, small paper, unillustrated, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i><a href='#f2' class='c018'><sup>[2]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c026'>The type of these editions has been distributed.</p>
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c025'><i>Mr. Seymour Haden’s Notes on Etching.</i> In illustration of
-the Art, and of his Collection of Etchings and Engravings of the
-Old Masters, exhibited at The Fine Art Society’s Galleries, 1879.
-Large Paper, Illustrated Edition, limited to 500 copies, £2
-2<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c026'>The same, small paper, unillustrated, 1<i>s.</i><a href='#f2' class='c018'><sup>[2]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c026'>The type of these editions has been distributed.</p>
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c025'><span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span><i>J. F. Millet—A Biography by W. E. Henley.</i> Illustrated with Twenty
-Etchings and Woodcuts, reproduced in facsimile. Large-paper Edition, limited to
-500 copies, £1 1<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-<p class='c025'><i>Samuel Palmer: A Biography by his Son, Mr. A. H. Palmer.</i> Illustrated
-with an Original Etching by Samuel Palmer, entitled “Christmas,” and
-several Autotypes and Wood Engravings. The Edition will be limited to 500
-copies. Price 31<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c026'>[<i>In the Press.</i></p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-<p class='c025'><i>The Year’s Art, 1882.</i> A concise Epitome of all matters relating to
-Painting, Sculpture, and Architecture, which have occurred during the year 1881,
-in the United Kingdom, together with Information respecting the events of 1882.
-By <span class='sc'>Marcus B. Huish</span>. Price 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-<p class='c025'><i>Notes by Mr. F. G. Stephens on a Collection of Drawings and Woodcuts by
-Thomas Bewick.</i> Exhibited at the Fine Art Society’s Rooms, 1880. Large Paper,
-Illustrated Edition, limited to 300 copies. Published at 21<i>s.</i>; price 31<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-Edition exhausted.</p>
-
-<p class='c026'>The same, small paper, unillustrated, 1<i>s.</i><a href='#f2' class='c018'><sup>[2]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c026'>The type of these editions has been distributed.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-<p class='c025'><i>Memoir and Complete Descriptive Catalogue of the Works of Charles
-Méryon.</i> By <span class='sc'>Philip Burty</span> and <span class='sc'>Marcus B. Huish</span>. 1879. Limited to 125
-copies; type distributed. Published at 16<i>s.</i>; price 21<i>s.</i></p>
-<hr class='c024' />
-<div class='fn'>
-
-<div class='footnote c002' id='f2'>
-<p class='c029'><span class='label'><a href='#r2'>2</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>These Handbooks, together with “John Everett Millais, R.A.,” by
-Andrew Lang; “Samuel Palmer,” by F. G. Stephens; and “The Sea
-Painters,” are sold bound in half calf, complete in one Volume,
-price 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c008' />
-</div>
-<p class='c026'>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='tnbox'>
-
- <ul class='ul_1 c008'>
- <li>Transcriber’s Notes:
- <ul class='ul_2'>
- <li>Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Typographical errors were silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only when a predominant
- form was found in this book.
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
-
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