Etchings Institutions search term: boston public library
Sleeping Child, Ajaccio | ||
| Number: | 488 | |
| Date: | 1901 | |
| Medium: | etching | |
| Size: | 153 x 190 mm | |
| Signed: | butterfly at upper left | |
| Inscribed: | no | |
| Set/Publication: | no | |
| No. of States: | 1 | |
| Known impressions: | 18 | |
| Catalogues: | K.-; M.-; T.-; W.- | |
| Impressions taken from this plate (18) | ||
KEYWORD
                            child,   dog, doorway, people, mother, street.
DESCRIPTION
A house front, drawn    parallel to the edge of the copper plate.   An open doorway frames four figures: a young woman sits with a baby asleep on her knee; behind her, to the left, sits an older woman; and a man stands in deep shadow behind  the old lady  and slightly to the left. Just inside the doorway, on the left, a ladder-like frame reaches from ground to ceiling, with some material thrown casually over one of the cross-pieces. Tall wooden doors or shutters open to left and right of the open doorway; the one on the right is constructed from three planks with a hinge near the top, and there is a rough bench standing in front of it.  To right of this door or shutter there is a dog sniffing at the ground, and behind the dog, a woman balancing a jar on her head, receding into shadows.
SITTER
The group, presumably a family, has not been identified.
SITE
 The street  is  in Ajaccio, the capital of Corsica.
DISCUSSION
Whistler drew several similar studies  in his sketchbooks: these include Sketches of a woman nursing a child
                            [m1671], Two women and a child
                            [m1672], r.: Seated woman nursing a child; v.: Standing woman
                            [m1673], and particularly Seated mother and child
                            [m1674].
The composition, showing a family of different ages from grandmother to babe in arms, in a doorway, is the last of several  similar studies.  For instance, Bead Stringers
                            [235] and Fruit Stall
                            [225] were etched in Venice in 1880, and there were several notable examples in the  1890s, including Carpet Menders, Paris
                            [480], Sunflowers, Marché St Germain, Paris
                            [437], and Mme Pelletier, Blanchisserie, Paris
                            [481].
