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2 WHISTLER. £4 Monument to His Genius as an Etcher. - The scientific tendency of our time, which has had so marked an influence upon the writ ing of history and biography, has also left its impress upon the literature of art. For many years now the critic has been also the archaeol ogist and the cataloguer, paying no more atten tion to the broad interpretation of a master's genius and to the justly proportioned statement of the facts in his life than to the identifica tion of all of his works and the arrangement of BILUNGSGAT& (From the first state of the etching by Whistler.) them in a fairly chronological sequence, with indicaUons as to where they may he found. Especially has this latter service been under taken for the benefit of the connoisseur of prints The names of Bartsch and Beraldi. to name only two in a long list, are held in high honor by the collector. Without the pages of these and other authorities he would often be, indeed, in sad case, painfully picking his way through an almost intolerable confusion as to dates "states,' and so on. Many an historian of Rembrandt has been helpful to the collector of the great Dutchman's etchings, but it was loft to Rovinski to prepare the definitive Illus trated catalog, i. ■ which would illuminate prac tically every nook and cranny of the subject. If the print collector, looking over that book at the time of its publication twenty years ago. had been asked what companion it needed, he could have mad.- only one answer, demanding a similar work on Whistler. Such a work has ■j>v> bom print* d. It is the latest of these publications brought A:t in luxurious form and in limited editions jhich bear the imprint of the Grolier Club, and ; form-- a precious monument to the genius of . -re.it American artist. It consists, in the J*i pli.ee, "f a convenient quarto, beautifully ji.it. d at the De Vinne Press, and having for fta title "The Etched Work of Whistler; lllus 1 rated by Reproductions in Collotype of the Different State* of the Plates; Compiled, Ar ranged :;nd Described by Edward O. Kennedy. With :i:i Introduction by Royal Cortissoz." This, however, forms only part of the scheme, li is accompanied by three portfolios which t-ontain more than a thousand facsimile?. Jn other words, w< have here in some sort a unique collection of Whistler's etchings, a gal lery v which the collector may turn for abso lutely conclusive information as to practically every touch of the artist's needle. The author ship of the brief introduction surely need not he permitted to interfere with some description in this place ol a work long awaited by stu dents of Whistler as promising ;ui aid to the pursuit of their hobby available in no other way. The desirability of a list of Whistler's ew fl ings was recognized as for back as 1874, when Mr. Ralph Tin mas prepared a catalogue of the eighty-five subjects then known to him. The next writer to tike up the subject was Mr. I : < 'if'i'k Wedmore, who published a catalogue <i JH plates in 1886. Thirteen years later he issued a second edition, including 54 additional Fubjects, and after three years Tvlr. Kennedy still further extended this record, enumerating nearly a hundred subjects not previously cata logued. The exhibition at the Grolier Club in i'.'i'4 afforded an opportunity to put thirty-four mor«- subjects in the list, and there, fcr a time, the matter rested. In 19"1» it was brought to notice again through the publication by th- Caxton <'lul> in Chicago of a catalogue by Mr. Howard Mansfield, enumerating 440 plates, treating five additional pieces in an appendix, and thus exceeding the labors of all previous compilers. Every one of these Whistlerian dev otees is gratefully recognized bj the collector, but they necessarily yield to Mr. Kennedy, tvhose text, disclosing in itself exhaustive knowledge, is rendered doubly valuable by the facsimiles accompanying it. lii the course of his prefatory notes he ex- NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. SUNDAY.' FKBRVAKY 20, 1910. plains the origin of his wo,-k. The idea of deal ing with Whistler as Rovinski had dealt with ■n nit interested him for years, and he revived sympathetic encouragement from the Hte F B. Holden, himself a collector. To both these members of the (holier Club it seemed an \.mr ♦ .Mr in ' -rmony with the policy fol :St:i institution in the making of book- but even then, when they thought that only seven hundred reproductions at most would be required, they feared that the difficulties in the way would be unmanageable. As Mr. Ken nedy remarks, If it had occurred to them that more than a thousand reproductions would be required, their seal might, perhaps, have been permanently chilled. Nevertheless, they went on, with the final result that the Grolier Club has carried to completion a seemingly impos sible ta.sk. Mr. Kennedy has some interesting things to say about his development of the scheme with Whistler. When he first broached the subject, in 11H>1. the artist offered objec tions, saying that some one had made a simi lar proposition to him, which he- had instantly brushed away. Discussion revealed the fact that he had got the impression that the illus ———— — . i trations proposed by his previous interlocutor! were to be quite small, six or eight or more of them going on a page, and he had no desire to he the hero of what he called a "commercial catalogue." He was afraid, too. that the Gro lier publication might interfere with "the great work," by which he meant a project that had been mooted, having for its object the repro duction of all his works in every medium. Mr. Kennedy ultimately convinced him, as he tells in the following passage: I explained to Whistler that the catalogue which I proposed to make, If made at all. would be for a club of 375 members, and that an edition of only -100 copies would be issued. i added that it would not be sold to the public, but only by subscription to members of the club, and that it could not interfere with "the great work"' or with any other publication be mignt have in view "However" 1 said, "wait until this even ing after dinner, and I will show you exactly what I propose to do: then if you are not pleased I shall be surprised." I borrowed Kovinski's -Rembrandt* 1 from ■ friend, and as I happened ■i! the moment to have in my possession fine im- Di-CFsions of "Clement de Jonghe. •'Sylvius." ••| jhtni;i - : and several other subjects by the Dutch master 1 was enabled to show Whistler the origi nals and the reproductions of them side by side, and thereby rive him an exact idea of what I wished to do. Me had a profound admiration for the work of Rembrandt, and he was much im pressed by Rovinski's catalogue. "This is quite another kind of thing," he said, "this is very swell." and went on to wonder how I should ever be able to carry out a similar undertaking. I pointed out that* it would take time and patience, but thai a descriptive catalogue could never b« SO satisfactory as one in which all the variations of his work could be seen together, and that I was resolved, with his approval, to see the thing through. He cheerfully consented, and we talked it over until it was time to go to bed. I cannot refrain from recalling here the intense interest that Whistler displayed as we examined the por traits I had brought with me. He thought the •■Clement <ie Jonghe" was quite extraordinary and the "Sylvius" very tine The "Burgomaster Six 1 on the contrary, did not move him. though lie admitted that it was an unsurpassed feat of technique. He seemed to forget all about his own work in contemplating that of "the inspired Dutchman." Beneath the "Clement de .longhe he wrote the following tribute: "Without Maw. Beautiful as a Greek marble or a canvas by Tin toret. A masterpiece in all its elements, beyond which there is nothing!" Mr. Kennedy alludes to the many journeys mad.- in the interest el this catalogue, and his examteatso* < >f countless impressions in public ~-l private collections. Cltarly all this has been • labor of love He is singularly unobtrusive and concise in his text, confining himself to the tersest description where such Hgiit is needed, and altogether framing his list ami notes in such wise as t<i give the collector the simplest. Clearest and most practical help. Of course, in many instances, comment is: the briefer since the facsimiles are there. The usefulness of these it would be imjKissible to exaggerate. They serve a doable purpose. In the first pla< » . they facilitate the clearing up of the collectors problems, especially as regards the chronology of "states." Furthermore, for tht student gen erally, they vividiy ezposi th.- evolution of the FIXETTE. ,7rcin the ninth state of the etching by Whistler.) (From the third ataae < t H *y WhMhr.> etcher's style, as well as something of the secret of his method. Whistler was a craftsman c! extraordinary authority, but he was hard to satisfy, and, by the very nature of the process he employed, he was repeatedly urged to work over a given plate, not infrequently carrying ft through eight <*r nine "states" before he felt that he had achieved precisely what he was driving at. Eleven times he thus studied "The Balcony," mm of his later Venetian plates. Th incident is characteristic of his solicitude for perfection. To pore over these facsimiles is to be admitted into his workshop and to gain a new sense of the capacity of genius for takin; pains. A word as to the character of the repro ductions. Made by the photo-gelatine process and of th*- exact dimensions of the originaK they are wonderfully satisfactory substitutes for the latter. R. C. LOVERS OF GOOD ART are cordially invited to visit the Exhibition of Early English Masters including original paintings by Reynolds, Gainsborough. Romney, Heppner, Beechey, Morland, etc., AT THE €bricb Galleries Fifth Avenue and 4* th Street. Exhibition of Paintings BY WILLIAM S. ROBINSON and Etchings BY GKOR«K AID February I4th to 26th At the Louis Katz Galleries :U>* ((ll.rMßl'-i AVKM X CLARK GALLERY 566 FIFTH AVr.Mli RARE PAINTINGS Cleaning and Restoring of Pictures a Specialty FRANK BAKBKK CLARK. K\p*rt. We Publish a New Book Every Week. LET US PUBLISH YOURS. ROBERT EMMETS WOOING By E. <• BLUM. $l.f>o this -A.-k. Send for "HOW AND WHERE TO SELL MANUPCIUPT-V ~>o cents. COCHRANE PUBLISHING CO. 29C TRIBUNE I..!!. 1"4 Nassau -• NVw York. JAMES E. UNDERHILL Pictures and Frames For the Holidays 33 JOHN ST. LONG SANG Tl CHINESE CURIO CO. 293 Fifth Ayr.. bet. 30th an.T Tl-t. »w Yons- Their t..« *!• t iT). jltustratiDK It.. history i»f urlenw* Art and suites to lie worn lor £u»xi luch on uicerei* ■lay*, vow rettdy. Cor. Nassau