Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum Glasgow Escócia
OST - 171x143 - 1872-1873
Arrangement in Grey
and Black, No. 2: Portrait of Thomas Carlyle is an 1872–73 oil painting by James McNeill Whistler. It depicts the Scottish social critic, philosopher and
historian Thomas Carlyle in a composition similar to that of Whistler's Arrangement
in Grey and Black No. 1: Portrait of the Artist's Mother, painted in 1871.
It is now in the Kelvingrove Art
Gallery and Museum in Glasgow, Scotland.
By the time he sat for Whistler, Thomas Carlyle had lived in Chelsea, London, for 47 years, and was one of its most recognized residents.
He lived at 24 Cheyne Row, now Carlyle's House, which is preserved as a museum, very near to Lindsey House, now 96 Cheyne Walk, where Whistler had his studio. Accompanied by a mutual friend,
Carlyle visited Whistler's studio, viewed the painting of the artist's mother,
and according to Whistler "He liked the simplicity of it, the old lady
sitting with her hands in her lap, and said he would be painted. And he came one morning
soon, and he sat down, and I had the canvas ready, and my brushes and palette,
and Carlyle said, 'And now, mon, fire away!'"
There exist
four preparatory studies in oil, and several drawings related to the finished
painting. Several sketches in the Freer Gallery of Art suggest
that while Whistler based the composition on the painting of his mother, he
also considered variations: a chalk drawing shows Carlyle seated at an angle to
the wall, a corner of the room shown at left, and without the coat that would
be thrown over his lap in the painting In the painting Whistler reverted
to the planar composition of Arrangement
in Grey and Black: Portrait of the Artist's Mother, and included the
robe that created a broader shape, reminiscent of the dress from the earlier picture. The
canvas is slightly larger than that of the portrait of Mrs. Whistler, and is of
a vertical format. Other differences include a subtle turn of the subject's
head toward the viewer, and the shape caused by the bunching up of Carlyle's
coat; these result in a mood of psychological disturbance that is quite
different from the more static pose of his mother's portrait.
The composition with a profile figure painted
in a range of dark tones is shared with the Portrait of the Artist's Mother, as is the over-riding concern
with aesthetic arrangement, for all the two works' psychological penetration.
Whistler painted the preeminent moral philosopher of his time as a nuanced
study in shapes and colours.
Though Whistler had initially requested two
or three sittings, Carlyle posed from 1872 into the summer of 1873. Several
witnesses recounted Carlyle's stillness juxtaposed with Whistler's frenetic
working movements, with the artist Hugh Cameron recalling "It was the
funniest thing I ever saw. There was Carlyle sitting motionless, like a Heathen
God or Oriental sage, and Whistler hopping about like a sparrow.
Years later
Whistler wrote of Carlyle:
"He is a favorite of mine. I like the gentle sadness
about him! -- perhaps he was even sensitive -- and even misunderstood -- who
knows!"
Whistler's reference to sadness, and the
sense of 'turbulence' in the characterization, may have reflected the remorse
of Carlyle's later years, following the death of his wife Jane Welsh Carlyle in
1866. While sitting for Whistler, Carlyle wrote in his journal "More
and more dreary, barren, base, and ugly seem to me all the aspects of this poor
diminishing quack world." In 1891 Arrangement in Grey and Black, No. 2: Portrait of Thomas Carlyle became
the artist's first painting to enter a public collection when it was purchased,
at the insistence of the Glasgow Boys, by the City of Glasgow.
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