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ISBN: HB: 9780300135459

Yale University Press

December 2007

256 pp.

25.6x19.2 cm

40 colour images, 90 black&white illus.

HB:
£45,00
QTY:

Categories:

Fragile Modernism

Whistler and His Impressionist Followers

Whistler embarked on a new project in the 1880s, working on a small scale in oil, pastel and watercolour, representing new London subjects and painting portraits of new urban types. This book is the first critical study of Whistler and his Impressionist followers and offers an in-depth analysis of Whistler's art as well as new insights into his modernist project. Anna Gruetzner Robins shows how Whistler formed an avant-garde group around himself and sought out followers who included Elizabeth Armstrong Forbes, Mortimer Menpes, Theodore Roussel, Walter Sickert and Sidney Starr to emulate his art and proselytise on his behalf. Their reminiscences and writings provide new information about Whistler's art, while their own little-known work, much of which is published here for the first time, is a testimony to its persuasive effect. Using a wealth of primary material, Robins tracks the history of Whistler and his group and shows through testimony and practice that they were formulating an identity as avant-garde artists. This is the first critical study of these Impressionist artists and throws new light on this neglected aspect of British art.

About the Author

Anna Gruetzner Robins is Reader in the History of Art at the University of Reading. She is the co-author (with Richard Thomson) of "Degas, Sickert and Toulouse Lautrec: London and Paris 1870-1910" (2005).

Reviews

"Richly supported by extensive research of exhibition reviews, journalistic coverage and artists' correspondance, Robins's book challenges other scholars to explore in different directions Whistler's latest work, which has great appeal for many contemporary painters" – Martin Hopkinson, Burlington Magazine

"...a fascinating book" – Matthew Sturgis, Times Literary Supplement

"'A Fragile Modernism' is the product of decades of thought, stringent visual analyisis and inspiration. No-one has closer knowledge of the New English Art Club, of the Royal Society of British Artists and of Whistler's disciples during the 1880s than Dr Robins. She has drawn upon and drawn together her unrivalled familiarity with the art and archives of her chosen field, to write a mature and thought – provoking book" – Wendy Baron, The British Art Journal