Nácar y plata: la andaluza

James McNeill Whistler, Mother of Pearl and Silver: The Andalusian, 1888. Wikimedia Commons. · PD

Nácar y plata: la andaluza


Ficha

Año
1900
Técnica
óleo sobre lienzo
Tipo
pintura
Dimensiones
191,5 × 89,8 cm

La historia

Whistler titled his pictures the way a composer names music, a harmony, an arrangement, here mother-of-pearl and silver, because he wanted them seen as combinations of tone rather than stories about people. The woman standing with her back to us is Ethel Whibley, his sister-in-law and secretary, in a gray silk evening gown; the black bolero with its layered sleeves gives the Spanish note in the title. One historian said it is not a portrait of a person but of a dress. Whistler picked at it on and off for years, into the last decade of his life. It came to the National Gallery of Art in Washington, where it hangs today.

Nácar y plata: la andaluza — James McNeill Whistler — MuseScope