ANN ARBOR, MI.- The University of Michigan Museum of Art will present the prints of noted American artist James McNeill Whistler (18341903) in a comprehensive special exhibition entitled On Beauty and the Everyday: The Prints of James McNeill Whistler, on view August 21 through November 28, 2010. This major exhibition will feature more than 100 works of art from UMMAs rare and important Whistler collection, which covers the artists entire career in Europe, ranging from his student days and exposure to the vanguard artistic movements of the 19th century to the groundbreaking and atmospheric lithographs and etchings of his mature style. It is the first exhibition devoted to Whistlers works at UMMA since 1994.
UMMAs Whistler collection represents one of the finest holdings of Whistlers graphic output in North America. Nearly all of the Whistler works came to the Museum through the bequest of Margaret Watson Parker, an early collector of both Whistlers prints and Japanese art. This set of interests brought her in contact with Americas most important collector of Whistlers work, Charles Lang Freer. The works in the Parker collection are notable for the quality of the impressions, often including rare images, and rank among the finest collections in American museums.
The exhibition will explore Whistlers illustrious life and career; his artistic themes and concerns, including portraiture and his well-known series from England, Italy, and France; the interests and legacy of early-20th-century Whistler collector Margaret Watson Parker; and the tools and techniques that Whistler employed as a printmaker.
Whistler was born in the United States but moved to Europe as a teenager. While living in Paris and London, he came in contact with avant-garde artists, alternative modes of representation offered by Japanese woodblock prints, and the diverse approaches of the Realists, Pre-Raphaelites, and the Impressionists. UMMAs exhibition will examine the unique and innovative style Whistler developedblending acute observation, a delicate sense of color, and an understated simplicity.