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25 avril 2014

National Museums Scotland acquires rare cabinet painted by James Abbott McNeill Whistler

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The Whistler cabinet © Ian Jacobs Photography

EDINBURGH.- National Museums Scotland has acquired a magnificent maple cabinet designed by Edward William Godwin and painted by the renowned artist, James Abbott McNeill Whistler.

The acquisition has been made possible by generous funding from the Art Fund and the National Museums Scotland Charitable Trust.

The object is hugely important in the history of nineteenth century art and applied arts. In the style of the Anglo-Japanese aesthetic movement, the cabinet is the result of an artistic collaboration between Edward William Godwin, an influential designer of the aesthetic movement and James Abbot McNeill Whistler, the most controversial and celebrated painter of the aesthetic movement. The cabinet was manufactured by William Watt Art Furniture.

Made circa 1878 and entitled Harmony in Yellow and Gold – The Cloud Cabinet it is birds eye maple veneer on mahogany and intricately carved with Japanese-style floral, bird and geometric motifs and painted with stippled clouds and butterflies in gold. The butterfly was Whistler’s signature and can be seen on almost all of his work after 1869.

Designed by Godwin and painted by Whistler the cabinet was probably intended for either Watt’s stand at the 1878 Paris Exposition Universelle or for Whistler’s Godwin-designed house The White House (1878) and still has Watt’s label on the back. Similar motifs of clouds and butterflies can be seen in Whistler’s Peacock Room, designed for the shipping tycoon Frederick Leyland and now housed in the Freer Gallery of Art in Washington, which was finished in 1877 and which is regarded by many as the most outstanding example of aesthetic movement interior decoration.

Dr Sally-Anne Huxtable, Principal Curator of Art and Design said, “The Cloud Cabinet is of exceptional importance and enhances our already internationally significant collections of European art and design. We are delighted to have acquired this unique and beautiful item and look forward to displaying it within our new galleries of Art and Design when they open to visitors in 2016.”

Stephen Deuchar, director of the Art Fund, said: “We are delighted to support the acquisition of this outstanding cabinet, unique in the history of European design. It will be a spectacular and important addition to National Museums Scotland’s collections, providing a link between their Japanese works and those of modern and contemporary art and design.”

The cabinet will be displayed in one of four new galleries currently being designed to showcase National Museums’ internationally important collections of Art and Design. These galleries along with six new galleries of Science and Technology comprise the £14 million next phase of the ambitious Masterplan to transform the National Museum of Scotland. Display space will increase by over 40%, with three-quarters of the objects not previously on permanent display. To be completed in 2016, the displays will champion excellence and innovation, offering an inspirational resource for the scientists, engineers, artists and designers of tomorrow. 

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James Robinson, Keeper of Art and Design, National Museums Scotland with Whistler’s cabinet © Ian Jacobs Photography.

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Dr Sally-Anne Huxtable, Principal Curator of Art and Design with Whistler’s cabinet © Ian Jacobs Photography.

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