"Whistler's Mother" has a sister painting depicting the Scottish essayist and historian __. | |
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| Numbers Don't Lie |
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| Height (in feet) of a statue of Anna McNeill Whistler in Ashland, Pennsylvania | 8 |
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| | Total area (in square feet) of "Arrangement in Grey and Black No. 1" | 25 |
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| Age, in years, of Anna McNeill Whistler when she sat for the painting | 67 |
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| | Months it took Whistler to paint "Arrangement in Grey and Black No. 1" | 3 |
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| James McNeill Whistler won a lawsuit against an art critic who panned one of his paintings. |
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In the summer of 1877, the famed British critic John Ruskin encountered Whistler's "Nocturne in Black and Gold, The Falling Rocket" at London's Grosvenor Gallery. The oil painting was a lush, abstract vision of a fireworks show in Cremorne Gardens, overlooking the Thames River. That July, Ruskin — a painter himself — shared his opinion of the work in his periodical Fors Clavigera: "I have seen, and heard, much of Cockney impudence before now; but never expected to hear a coxcomb ask two hundred guineas for flinging a pot of paint in the public's face." Whistler, who was in serious debt, responded by suing Ruskin for libel; excerpts from the two-day trial found their way into Whistler's 1890 book The Gentle Art of Making Enemies. Despite emerging victorious, Whistler received far less than the £1,000 and court costs he requested: just a single farthing, the smallest coin denomination, worth 1/48 of a shilling. The lawsuit plunged Whistler further into bankruptcy, yet he kept the farthing on his watch chain for the rest of his life. "Nocturne in Black and Gold, The Falling Rocket" now belongs to the Detroit Institute of Arts. | |
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