Detail from The Canal, Amsterdam, 1889, James McNeill Whistler, The Hunterian, University of Glasgow

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Grey and Brown: The Sad Sea Shore

Composition

Grey and Brown: The Sad Sea Shore, Freer Gallery of Art
Grey and Brown: The Sad Sea Shore, Freer Gallery of Art

Pentimenti show that the group of three figures in the centre was once farther to the left and higher up, breaking the line of water. The group was also tried out further to the right.

Technique

Grey and Brown: The Sad Sea Shore, Freer Gallery of Art
Grey and Brown: The Sad Sea Shore, Freer Gallery of Art

The essentially simple composition of long fluid brushstrokes reaching from one side of the panel to the other is complicated and contradicted by the fussy work around the seated figures, which must have been painted while the background was still wet. The colour is sombre, the brown sand and grey sea matching the title exactly, and painted over a pale grey ground. It is unique in Whistler's work in having no horizon visible.

Conservation History

Grey and Brown: The Sad Sea Shore, photograph, 1913/1914
Grey and Brown: The Sad Sea Shore, photograph, 1913/1914

An early photograph, dating from when it was at Knoedler's in New York, shows no change in the picture's condition, except that there is now a small scratch or abrasion at lower right.

According to Freer Gallery records, it was cleaned and varnished in 1937, resurfaced in 1938, and again cleaned and resurfaced in 1951.

Frame

Grey and Brown: The Sad Sea Shore, Freer Gallery of Art
Grey and Brown: The Sad Sea Shore, Freer Gallery of Art

1886: The frame was probably made for the 1886 Dowdeswell exhibition. 1

Notes:

1: Dr S. L. Parkerson Day, Report on frames, 2017; see also Parkerson 2007 [more].

Last updated: 31st December 2020 by Margaret