You are viewing this article in the AnnArbor.com archives. For the latest breaking news and updates in Ann Arbor and the surrounding area, see MLive.com/ann-arbor
Posted on Wed, Aug 25, 2010 : 12:05 p.m.

Whistler print exhibit opens at University of Michigan Museum of Art

By AnnArbor.com Freelance Journalist

Whistler Prints_Need-1.jpg

Technician Matt Casadonte checks lighting levels for the Whistler exhibit at the University of Michigan Museum of Art.

Paul Sancya | AP

By DAVID RUNK Associated Press Writer

An exhibition of more than 100 prints by James McNeill Whistler at the University of Michigan Museum of Art is the largest collection of the 19th century American artist's work to be displayed there in more than 15 years.

Now best known for his iconic painting popularly known as "Whistler's Mother," the artist's etchings and lithographs drew him renown during his lifetime. The three-month show spans Whistler's career, and includes prints of scenes from London's port and Venice's canals, as well as intimate portraits of family members and himself.

The themes, effects that he's moving towards in painting are finding their way into print," said Carole McNamara, the museum's Senior Curator of Western Art. "His prints, of course, were popular ... before the paintings really caught on."

Stanley Weintraub, the author of 1974's "Whistler: A Biography," noted that the artist had a two-sided career: His prints were commercially accessible while he lived, but relatively few of his paintings were marketable.

"They were among the masterpieces of the time," Weintraub said of Whistler's prints.

"On Beauty and the Everyday: The Prints of James McNeill Whistler" opened Saturday and runs through Nov. 28. Most of the works — and most of the Ann Arbor museum's Whistler holdings — came from Margaret Watson Parker, whose 1936 bequest to the museum included Whistler's prints and an extensive Asian art collection.

"She was really quite astute in what she collected," McNamara said. "A lot of what she collected hinged really around her interest in Whistler."

Whistler Prints_Need.jpg

Technician Matt Casadonte checks lighting levels.

Paul Sancya | AP

That interest brought her in contact with Charles Lang Freer, a Detroit industrialist and the founder of the Smithsonian Institution's Freer Gallery of Art, which claims the world's greatest collection of Whistler's work. Freer collected the work of Americans including Whistler and later expanded his collection to Asian art.

Whistler, who was born in Lowell, Mass., left for Europe when he was 21 and spent the rest of his life there.

"Arrangement in Grey and Black, No. 1" — also known as "Whistler's Mother" — is owned by the Musee d'Orsay in Paris. It was displayed at the Detroit Institute of Arts as part of a Whistler show in 2004.

Parker began collecting Whistler's works before his death in 1903 and bought collections that became available afterward, McNamara said. The University of Michigan Museum of Art's Whistler collection includes nearly 200 works by the artist, but they're rarely shown in large numbers because of their susceptibility to damage from light exposure.

In 1994, the Whistler display at the museum included about 80 highlights. This time, the exhibition is more extensive — filling a large second-floor gallery that was renovated as part of the museum's $41.9 million expansion and renovation.

"This is exactly the kind of space that Whistler would have loved to have his work shown in," McNamara said.

The museum is located at 525 S. State Street, Ann Arbor. Hours: Tuesday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sunday, noon-5 p.m.; closed Mondays. Admission is free; $5 suggested donation. "On Beauty and the Everyday: The Prints of James McNeill Whistler" runs through Nov. 28.

Watch for a review of the Whistler exhibit coming up on AnnArbor.com.