Twelve Etchings from Nature:  En Plein Soleil

Cleveland Museum of Art

Twelve Etchings from Nature: En Plein Soleil

James McNeill Whistler

Date
1858
Medium
etching on chine collé
Culture
America
Department
Prints
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

En plein air typifies the taste for French art and for the practice of executing landscapes out of doors. Whistler referred to the Twelve Etchings from Nature as the "French Set," so-called because the chief sources of inspiration were to be found in the avant-garde French art of the day. Working from a low vantage point, Whistler placed his model on the crest of a hill with a distant town and poplar tree behind her. The bright play of sun on her face, the veiled half-shadow cast by the parasol, the wind-whipped fringe and grasses all contribute to the immediacy of the scene and to the artist’s developing powers to capture nuances of his subject.

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