James McNeill Whistler - Grey and Silver Old Battersea Reach 1863

The Last of Old Westminster 1862 Battersea Reach 1863 Battersea Reach from Lindsey Houses 1863 Grey and Silver Old Battersea Reach 1863 An Arrangement in Grey and Green. Portrait of John James Cowan 1893 Caprice in Purple and Gold. The Golden Screen 1864 Purple and Rose. The Lang Leizen of the Six Marks 1864
Grey and Silver Old Battersea Reach 1863

Grey and Silver Old Battersea Reach 1863
68x50cm oil/canvas
The Art Institute of Chicago

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From The Art Institute of Chicago:
James McNeill Whistler painted marine subjects throughout his career. For several years beginning in 1855, the expatriate American artist divided his time between London and Paris; in the latter, he was exposed to the bold realism and thickly impastoed surfaces of the paintings of Gustave Courbet. The older artist’s influence shaped Whistler’s depiction of the Thames River, a subject that frequently appeared in his work after he moved to London in 1863. In this painting, he focused on the river’s industrial nature—boats and barges, laboring men, and smoking chimneys—which featured so largely in urban life.