Artwork Page for Cameo, No. 1 (Mother and Child)

Details / Information for Cameo, No. 1 (Mother and Child)

Cameo, No. 1 (Mother and Child)

c. 1890–93
(American, 1834–1903)
Culture
America
Medium
etching
Catalogue raisonné
Kennedy 347
State
only state
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

Among a group of etchings Whistler made from a nude or partly draped model around 1890 was a pair entitled Cameo No. 1 and Cameo No. 2, showing a young mother playing with her child. Here, the mother leans over the child in an enclosed, protective gesture, perhaps whispering a lullaby. Whistler's treatment of the figure's robe, a semi-classical design based on Roman dress, captured the translucent qualities of the drapery which partly reveals and partly conceals the form beneath. Of this group, the artist's favorite etching was Cameo No. 1, and in 1893 he chose it to be exhibited among a selection of his prints at the Chicago World's Fair. American collectors, however, found Cameo No. 1 too risqué, and the artist was told it was unsalable because of "the thinness of the drapery."
A vertically oriented etching in black ink on cream paper features a woman with a light skin tone crouching and facing our right. Wearing a draped garment and rounded headwrap, she leans toward a small child's face. The composition uses thin, sketchy lines and fine hatching against a vacant background. To the figure's right, a small, stylized butterfly-like monogram floats in the open space.

Cameo, No. 1 (Mother and Child)

c. 1890–93

James McNeill Whistler

(American, 1834–1903)
America

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