0 likesNot savedShare from mobile app
paper (fiber product)16 × 24 Cm
Views
0
Likes
0
Saves
Not saved
Shares
0
About the artwork
Artist supplied description.
Similar to many other artists of the period, Whistler relied on family members to serve as models. Relatives sometimes posed for formal works but were often pictured in everyday settings. Many of the resulting prints and drawings are charmingly casual, as exemplified by these domestic images of Whistler’s wife and two of her sisters. In one, Beatrice Whistler and her younger sister Ethel Whibley play a four-hand piano piece in the comfortable, lamp-lit salon of the Whistlers’ home in Paris. The other lithograph, which shows Beatrice’s youngest sister, Rosalind Birnie Philip, is more poignant. Whistler drew her as she sat by Beatrice’s sickbed in a London hotel room, several months before Beatrice’s death.
Artwork metadata
Structured fields synced from connected systems.
| Medium | paper (fiber product) |
| Dimensions | 16 × 24 Cm |
| Certificate | Certificate not provided |
Timeline
Chain of custody, exhibitions, and verification milestones synced from the provenance service.
Provenance events haven't been recorded yet. Add events from the mobile app to build the chain of custody.
© Artist-Unknown. All rights reserved.
