Etchings Institutions search term: dowdeswell
Little Chelsea (Memorial) | ||
Number: | 315 | |
Date: | 1887 | |
Medium: | etching and drypoint | |
Size: | 52 x 83 mm | |
Signed: | butterfly at lower left | |
Inscribed: | no | |
Set/Publication: | no | |
No. of States: | 2 | |
Known impressions: | 3 | |
Catalogues: | K.331; M.323; W.246 | |
Impressions taken from this plate (3) |
Little Chelsea (Memorial) dates from 1887.
The fiftieth anniversary of the coronation of Queen Victoria (1819-1901) was celebrated in July 1887. Impressions of this etching and Windsor (Memorial)
[313] were included in an album that was presented by Whistler to Queen Victoria (1819-1901).
Whistler was at that time the rather autocratic President of the Society of British Artists. On behalf of the Society he sent a 'Memorial Address' congratulating the Queen, decorated with his drawings and etchings. Several drafts of the text survive, dating from July 1887, but the Album itself has disappeared. 1
1: Draft, [6 July 1887], GUW #05969.
The gift was acknowledged on 20 July 1887, when Henry Matthews (1868-1874) wrote to the Society of British Artists:
[I] 'have had the honour to lay before the Queen the loyal and dutiful Address of the Society of British Artists on the occasion of Her Majesty attaining the Fiftieth Year of Her Reign; - And I have to inform you that Her Majesty was pleased to receive the same very graciously; and to command me to express Her Majesty's appreciation of the beautiful and artistic illuminations of the Album in which the address was enclosed.' 2
2: H. Matthews to S.B.A., 20 July 1887, GUW #01835.
Whistler recalled the preparation of the Album in detail:
'I found that the Academy and the Institute
and the rest of them were preparing addresses to the Queen, and
so I went to work too, and I prepared a most wonderful address ... I
took a dozen folio sheets of my old Dutch etching paper.
I had them bound by Zaehnsdorf. First, came the beautiful
binding in yellow morocco and the inscription to Her Majesty ... and on the first page you found a beautiful little
drawing of the royal arms that I had made myself ; the second
page, with an etching of Windsor, as though
'there's where
you live !
' On the third page, the address began. I made
decorations all round the text in water-colour, at the top the
towers of Windsor, down one side a great battleship plunging
through the waves, and below, the sun that never sets on the
British Empire ... The following pages were not decorated,
just the most wonderful address, explaining the age and
dignity of the Society, its devotion to Her Glorious, Gracious
Majesty, and suggesting the honour it would be if this could be
recognised by a title that would show the Society to belong specially
to Her. Then, the last page; you turned, and there was a
little etching of my house at Chelsea ' And now, here's where I
live!' And then you closed it, and at the back of the cover was
the Butterfly.' 3
3: Pennell 1908 , II, pp. 66-67.
The album, bound in yellow morocco leather, was presented to Queen Victoria, who in thanks gave the Society of British Artists the title 'Royal Society of British Artists:
'This was all done and well on its way, and not a
word was said to the Society ... But, all the time, my beautiful address
was on its way to Windsor, and finally came the Queen's
acknowledgment and command that the Society should be called
Royal. I carried this to a meeting ... And then I got up with
great solemnity, and I announced the honour conferred upon
them by Her Gracious Majesty, and they jumped up and they
rushed towards me with outstretched hands. ... the meeting over, then
I sent for champagne."
4
4: Pennell 1908 , II, pp. 66-67.