Oil Painting
ca. 1932 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Rex Whistler (1905-1944) painted this panel to replace a missing section of a chinoiserie wallpaper bought by Mr Samuel Courtauld at Bath. The empty frame was designed to contain Picasso's picture L'enfant au Pigeon. There is a strip of the original 19th-century chinoiserie wallpaper in the collection (P.13A-1977).
Whistler was a noted painter of murals, as well as a book-illustrator and stage-designer. Perhaps his best known murals are those in the restaurant of Tate Britain.
Whistler was a noted painter of murals, as well as a book-illustrator and stage-designer. Perhaps his best known murals are those in the restaurant of Tate Britain.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Oil on canvas |
Brief description | Portion of a wall-paper in the chinoiserie style, with a picture frame as its central motif, painted to house Picasso's "L'Enfant au Pigeon"; Oil on canvas; Rex Whistler; From above the chimney-piece of a bedroom in No.12, North Audley Street, London; England; 1932. |
Physical description | Portion of a wallpaper in the Chinoiserie style, with a picture frame as its central motif, painted to house Picasso's 'L'Enfant au Pigeon'; Oil on canvas; Signed and dated Rex Whistler 1932. |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions | 'Rex Whistler 1932' (Signed and dated.) |
Credit line | Given by an anonymous donor |
Object history | From above a chimney-piece of a bedroom in No. 12 North Audley Street, London. Given by an anonymous donor, 1977. The artist has provided this missing section of a chinoiserie wallpaper, bought by Mr Samuel Courtauld at Bath. A similar work was executed by the artist on the walls of a room at 39, Preston Park Avenue, Brighton, a month before he was killed. A strip of the original 19th century chinoiserie wallpaper is P.13A-1977. |
Production | Provenance: Above the chimneypiece of a bedroom in 12, North Audley Street, London |
Subjects depicted | |
Summary | Rex Whistler (1905-1944) painted this panel to replace a missing section of a chinoiserie wallpaper bought by Mr Samuel Courtauld at Bath. The empty frame was designed to contain Picasso's picture L'enfant au Pigeon. There is a strip of the original 19th-century chinoiserie wallpaper in the collection (P.13A-1977). Whistler was a noted painter of murals, as well as a book-illustrator and stage-designer. Perhaps his best known murals are those in the restaurant of Tate Britain. |
Associated object | P.13A-1977 (Original) |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | P.13-1977 |
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Record created | May 25, 2006 |
Record URL |
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