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Eden Versus Whistler. The Baronet & the Butterfly : A Valentine with a Verdict

Eden Versus Whistler. The Baronet & the Butterfly : A Valentine with a Verdict

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Eden Versus Whistler. The Baronet & the Butterfly : A Valentine with a Verdict

by [SIGNED, WITH ORIGINAL PHOTO.] Whistler, James McNeil

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About This Item

New York: R.H. Russell, 1899. Hardcover. Sm 4to (10" x 7.5"), half linen, gilt brown paper over boards. Supplementary frontis. port. of Whistler, 78 pp., occasional Whistler butterfly and other ornaments in text. Untrimmed. Colophon signed by Whistler with his butterfly signature. Original albumen print photo of Whistler affixed to front pastedown, with stamp of London Stereoscopic Company in the lower right corner. Newspaper and magazine clippings relating to Whistler laid in. CONDITION: Good, moderate wear to extremities, spine toned, covers rubbed, light offsetting and foxing to pastedowns and endpapers, light offsetting from laid in clippings to colophon page, page opposite, and one other page, terminal endpaper discolored, otherwise clean throughout.

First edition, limited to two hundred and fifty signed copies, "one hundred and twenty five for France - one hundred and twenty five for America." This copy is number 13 from the American run. From the library of etcher, poster-artist and friend of Whistler, Ernest Haskell. This copy was used by Haskell as a scrapbook of material pertaining to Whistler. 

Eden Versus Whistler is the artist's account of the facts relating to legal action taken against him in connection with his portrait of Lady Eden. "In 1892, Sir William Eden, a wealthy baronet, expressed that he would like Whistler to paint his wife Lady Eden. Whistler initially said he would charge 500 guineas, which William Eden thought to be too much. Later Whistler changed his mind and said he would agree to paint Lady Eden for between 100 to 150 pounds. Lady Eden sat for the portrait in Paris in January 1894. In February 1894, Eden saw the painting in Whistler's studio and, as he was completely satisfied with the painting, he sent a cheque to Whistler for 100 guineas. Whistler accepted the cheque but kept the painting. Eden then travelled to India, and while he was overseas, Whistler sent the painting to an exhibition in Paris, at the National Society for Fine Arts. When Eden returned from India, Eden demanded delivery of the painting, but Whistler refused. Whistler returned the money which Eden had paid him; Whistler considered that as he had returned the money, he was not obliged to give the painting to Eden. In November 1894, Eden started legal proceedings in Paris. While the proceedings were ongoing, Whistler painted out the face and the figure of Lady Eden, and painted, over the top, the portrait of another sitter (an American, Mrs Herbert Dudley Hale) and added a pot of flowers to the right of the sitter. Further, after the case had been decided, and the costs hearing was ongoing, Whistler is reported to have sandpapered down the picture, to reveal Lady Eden again. Before the courts, Eden argued that the picture was complete when he saw it in February 1894 and, as he had paid the price, Whistler was therefore obliged to deliver it to Eden, as the commissioner of the picture. However, Whistler resisted this argument, on the basis that the work was unfinished. As his lawyer argued in Court: 'you cannot oblige an artist, to give up an unfinished work and allow the incomplete creations of his heart and brain to circulate the world' (Whistler, 'Eden Versus Whistler: The Baronet and the Butterfly' 1899, p.27) The first instance court decided in favour of Eden, but Whistler won on appeal: Whistler could keep the picture, so long as both the purchase price and damages were paid to Eden." (Cooper, Elena. "What can we learn about Copyright History from Whistler's Portrait of Lady Eden?" online)

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Details

Bookseller
James Arsenault & Company US (US)
Bookseller's Inventory #
8534
Title
Eden Versus Whistler. The Baronet & the Butterfly : A Valentine with a Verdict
Author
[SIGNED, WITH ORIGINAL PHOTO.] Whistler, James McNeil
Book Condition
Used
Quantity Available
1
Publisher
New York: R.H. Russell, 1899

Terms of Sale

James Arsenault & Company

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About the Seller

James Arsenault & Company

Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Biblio member since 2021
Arrowsic, Maine

About James Arsenault & Company

James Arsenault & Company was established in 1988. Our stock consists of Americana, literature, fine press, early photography, plate books, trade catalogs, autographs & manuscripts, ephemera, maps, and historical prints, as well as fine and rare books and pamphlets in a variety of fields. We are members in good standing of the ABAA and ILAB, and have exhibited for many years at numerous rare book fairs in both the northeast and in California. We do not have an open shop, but welcome your inquiries regarding items in our stock possibly of interest to you.

Glossary

Some terminology that may be used in this description includes:

Gilt
The decorative application of gold or gold coloring to a portion of a book on the spine, edges of the text block, or an inlay in...
Fine
A book in fine condition exhibits no flaws. A fine condition book closely approaches As New condition, but may lack the...
Colophon
The colophon contains information about a book's publisher, the typesetting, printer, and possibly even includes a printer's...
Spine
The outer portion of a book which covers the actual binding. The spine usually faces outward when a book is placed on a shelf....
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