Portrait of Ellen Sturgis Hooper - 1890


Size (cm): 50x85
Price:
Sale price37.900 ISK

Description

The "portrait of Ellen Sturgis Hooper" of 1890, executed by the illustrious artist James McNeill Whistler, is one of those works that invites us to lose ourselves in the subtlety of the detail and the expressiveness contained. The painting, like many of Whistler's creations, highlights for its thoughtful composition and its refined color palette, elements that are combined to offer us a deeply introspective vision of Ellen Sturgis Hooper.

This work places us before a female figure that, although it is not iconographically clear without greater historical context, is presented with an ethereal force and a gratifying serenity. The figure of Ellen Sturgis Hooper is delineated with a softness and precision that evoke the clear line technique adopted by many adherents of realism and proto -impressionism. She is sitting, with a calm and resolved bearing, and her expression is enigmatic, almost absent, as if she were self -absorbed in deep thoughts.

In chromatic terms, Whistler makes use of a limited palette but effectively contrasting. The dark tones of their clothing merge gently with the background, creating a continuity in the composition that highlights its pale face and hands. This predilection for dark tones and integration with the background can evoke the Japanese technique that influenced Whistler so much, where the figure and the environment are harmonized in a visual symbiosis. Through the play of lights and shadows, Whistler captures the three -dimensionality of the figure, providing a depth that warmly contrasts with its modest fragility.

The environment in which the figure is intentionally indistinct, almost lacking specific details, leaving all the approach to Ellen Sturgis Hooper. This compositional choice not only highlights the central figure, but also reinforces the meditative and personal character of the portrait. It is no accident that Whistler called some of his works arrangements and tones, since he cares more about harmony and global effect than for individual details.

Ellen Sturgis Hooper, whose image in the work slides an air of aristocratic introspection, can be understood within the broader frame of Whistler female portraits. As in other works of the painter, as in Arrangement in Gray and Black, No. 1 (known as Whistler's mother) or Symphony in White, No. 1: The White Girl, there is a clear psychological density and emotional that is characteristic of their treatments of female figures.

James McNeill Whistler, a master Of the atmosphere and the tone, it demonstrates here its ability to capture not only the external appearance of its subjects but also to insinuate the depth of their personalities and moods. The themes and styles that cross their work are universal and timeless, addressing the human condition with a subtlety that is rarely matched.

The "portrait of Ellen Sturgis Hooper" is not simply a testimony of Whistler's technical skill, but a window to the human soul. It confronts us with the duality of presence and absence, and invites us to reflect on the ephemeral nature of identity and being. In its essential simplicity, the work exudes a stillness that resonates deeply, reminding us, once again, the perennial relevance of Whistler's art.

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