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It's been 40 years since the Lennon/Ono collaboration for peace and awareness, quite timely and yes, even for me, a very moving exhibit--peace.
Henry Clay Frick collected more of Whistler's work than anyone else, all purchased after the artist's death. They couldn't have been more different personalities but probably equals in ego and passion for their professions. It's a treat indeed to have the five portraits together.
Look at me for an instant longer and you will look forever.Sitting, or in this case standing, for a Whistler portrait was a torturous affair, lasting several sessions. Rosa Corder recounted that she posed some 40 times, lasting on two occasions until she fainted. To view a Whistler portrait is far from torturous, though: they're fluid, light, and dream like. Beauty dose have its price.
Whistler to the Comte de Montesquiou-Fezensac
Then, as now, music took the popular center stage in the arts, so Whistler titled his paintings accordingly. The Ocean was first titled Symphony in Gray and Green. The luscious portrait of Mrs Leyland peering over her shoulder in a Whistler-designed gown (pictured) is Symphony in Flesh Colour and Pink. Dueling with Mrs Leyland is the more lavish ruffled frock of Harmony in Pink and Gray: Portrait of Lady Meux. There could be a cat fight in this room before the summer is over -- meow.
On the opposite wall are two very different Goya/Rembrandt-inspired portraits in shades of black and brown, one of the Symbolist poet and social dandy Comte de Montesquiou-Fezensac [the model for Proust's Baron de Charlus--Ed.] and another of the artist Rosa Corder, who was supposedly the lover of Whistler's agent. What a tangled web of social intrigue -- what a simple time of leisure -- Gossip Girl without the texting!
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