Tuesday, 1 May 2018

James McNeill Whistler's Butterfly Signature


I've long been an admirer of the paintings of artist and aesthete James Abbott McNeill Whistler (1834-1903). I particularly like the loose, painterly style of the brush work he applied in his works of art, as well as the close tonal harmonies, and then there is the inspired idea of naming his paintings after musical terms such nocturnes, harmonies and arrangements. It was only recently that I noticed on closer inspection, that there were lepidopteral connections to his work in the form of the butterfly motifs and monograms that he applied to his paintings in lieu of a signature.



In the late 1800s the decorative style dubbed Chinoiserie, and the unusual viewpoints and close compositional cropping seen in Japanese prints were hugely popular and influential on Western artists such as the Impressionists, Van Gogh and Degas. Whistler himself also fell under the spell of the arts and crafts from the East, and amassed a large collection of Asian ceramics. He began to study the various potter's marks on the bases of the pieces that he collected, and this led to him adapting and developing his own monogram to stamp onto his paintings based on those found on Chinese/Japanese ceramics.





Whistler chose to adopt the butterfly motif (a popular image in Oriental art), as a signature in the 1860s, first using it on a drawing of a nude in 1869. The 'J' was the body of the butterfly, and the 'W' the wings. Whistler's butterfly mark became as distinctive as a signature and as he developed it, he began to apply it to his paintings.


Developmental monogram sketches.




Over the years his butterfly signature evolved and he began to place it in his paintings as a deliberate compositional element, as well as a monogram from 1873. This proved a very useful tool for art historians when researching and dating his work. There follows some nice examples of his paintings below, with the stylised butterfly monogram in various stages of development and prominence.

Harmony in Pink and Grey: Portrait of Lady Meux (1881)



Harmony in Grey and Green: Miss Cicely Alexander (1872-74)

Whistler incorporated actual painted butterflies, as well as the signature butterfly monogram in this popular portrait held in the Tate Gallery's collection.


 Nocturne: Blue and Silver - Cremorne Lights (1872)


The sparseness of composition, and economy of mark-making in these two paintings clearly show the influence of Japanese prints on Whistler's art.

Nocturne: Blue and Silver - Chelsea (1871)


Arrangement in Flesh Colour and Black: Portrait of Theodore Duret (1883-84)


The butterfly monogram is very prominent in these two male portraits in its own right. The monogram in the painting below looks very much like Batman's Bat signal.

 Arrangement in Grey and Black, No. 2: Portrait of Thomas Carlyle (1872-73)


At the time of his notoriously bitter libel trial against the art critic Ruskin, Whistler added a scorpion-like sting to the tail of his butterfly monogram as a sign of the delicate nature of his painting, and an indication of the combative spirit of his mischievous personality (below).



Below is the metal template that Whistler used to stencil his monogram onto his some of his works.


Arrangement In Grey: Portrait of the Painter (c.1872)



Portrait of Whistler as a Butterfly 
 

Friday, 27 April 2018

Elizabeth Taylor Spotified


I spotted yet more spotty/dotty art which stopped me dead in my tracks whilst cruising the mean streets of Croydon, (affectionately dubbed - "The Cronx" by locals). Graffiti is currently having a moment in this south London suburb, and this great installation piece in homage to the late Elizabeth Taylor devised and beautifully executed using the half-tone and CMYK print and colour separation process is by UK graffiti artist Dotmasters.






The work is available as a limited edition print on a white background (above).



You can view Dotmasters speeded up footage of the on-site installation process of this beautiful piece here.

Thursday, 19 April 2018

Source and Stimulus: Polke, Lichtenstein, Laing

Roy Lichtenstein - Frightened Girl, 1964

It wasn't my imagination. I was definately seeing spots before my eyes at this exhibition. I hadn't been back to Lévy Gorvy gallery since the great show they had last year of Pat Steir's Waterfall paintings (here), but I was determined to catch this show of the work of three artists who utilised the Ben-Day dot printing technique to their own ends in their work. The spotty coloured papers I use for my work are produced through a very similar process. The eponymous technique was devised in the 19th century by American illustrator and publisher Benjamin Day as a cost effective printing process that used dots in different densities to reproduce imagery on a mass scale. The technique was refined in the twentieth century and used in the production of newspapers, comic books, and advertisements. This show takes its title from featured artist Gerald Laing's 1964 exhibition at the Slade School of Art - Source and Stimulus. Lichtenstein was the first to adopt the technique of Ben-Day dots in his work in 1961, and then Laing in 1962 with the British half-tone dot system, and lastly Polke in 1963 who manipulated the German Rasterbild dot process. Although the three artists use a very similar technique, the finished results of their work are markedly different. The figurative, representational styles here make for a great contrast and departure from Abstract Expressionism which had been the dominant style of artwork until the 1960s. It was an unexpected surprise to be confronted again so soon with Lichtenstein's Little Aloha, (bottom picture below), which I had encountered only a few weeks earlier in Venice in the Sonnabend Collection at the Ca' Pesaro (here). This exhibition is a rare opportunity to see pieces such as Lichtenstein's Frightened Girl (above), which has been hidden away in a private collection since 1993, and Laing's Raincheck, and Shout, which have not been publicly exhibited since they were created and then bought by a collector in America in 1965. Source and Stimulus: Polke, Lichtenstein, Laing, is another very strong, focused show by the team at Lévy Gorvy.

Roy Lichtenstein - Bread and Jam, 1963


Sigmar Polke - Strand, 1966


Sigmar Polke - Freundinnen (Girlfriends), 1965-66



Roy Lichtenstein

Roy Lichtenstein - VIIP, 1962

Gerald Laing - Lincoln Convertible, 1964

Gerald Laing - C.T. Strokers, 1964


Gerald Laing source materials

Sigmar Polke - Puppe (Doll), 1965


Gerald Laing - Raincheck, 1965 

Gerald Laing - Shout, 1965

Sigmar Polke
Gerald Laing - Astronaut II, 1963

Gerald Laing - Starlet I, Starlet II, 1963


Sigmar Polke - Das Par (The Couple), 1965

Sigmar Polke - Frau mit Butterbrot, 1964


Sigmar Polke - Tennisspiel - Tennis Player, 1964


Roy Lichtenstein - Little Aloha, 1962





Source and Stimulus: Polke, Lichtenstein, Laing
until 21st April 
Lévy Gorvy
22 Old Bond Street
London
W1