Swan and Iris (sketch after Cecil Lawson's "Swan and Iris")
Whistler's etching is based on an unfinished painting by the British landscapist Lawson, a member of the Idyllists. The tranquil riverscape is composed of a flowering iris in the foreground, and a swan with outstretched wings moving across an expanse of water, perhaps the River Thames, towards a bank in the middle distance. The composition is framed by the wide span of an arched bridge. The print was commissioned as an illustration for a posthumous biography of Lawson written by Edmund Gosse and published in 1883, a copy of which is in the Museum's collection (17.3.2983). Lawson's wife, Constance Lawson, was the elder sister of Whistler's wife-to-be Beatrice Philip Godwin, whom he married in 1888.
Artwork Details
- Title: Swan and Iris (sketch after Cecil Lawson's "Swan and Iris")
- Artist: James McNeill Whistler (American, Lowell, Massachusetts 1834–1903 London)
- Artist: After Cecil Gordon Lawson (British, Wellington, Shropshire 1849–1882 London)
- Date: 1883
- Medium: Etching and drypoint, printed in black ink on medium weight ivory laid paper; fourth state of six (Glasgow)
- Dimensions: plate: 5 1/4 x 3 1/4 in. (13.3 x 8.3 cm)
sheet: 8 5/8 x 6 in. (21.9 x 15.2 cm) - Classification: Prints
- Credit Line: Harris Brisbane Dick Fund, 1917
- Object Number: 17.3.127
- Curatorial Department: Drawings and Prints
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