Thomas Wilmer Dewing 1851-1938
Seated Lady in a Yellow Dress, c. 1915–20
Pastel on paper
14 1/4 x 11 1/4 inches
36.2 x 28.6 cm
Framed dimensions: 20 3/8 x 17 inches
36.2 x 28.6 cm
Framed dimensions: 20 3/8 x 17 inches
Signed and inscribed lower right: T W Dewing / 104
Thomas Wilmer Dewing’s works on paper were almost entirely executed in pastel. His interest in the medium stemmed from James McNeill Whistler’s command of it, as evidenced by Whistler’s famous...
Thomas Wilmer Dewing’s works on paper were almost entirely executed in pastel. His interest in the medium stemmed from James McNeill Whistler’s command of it, as evidenced by Whistler’s famous 1889 pastel exhibition in New York, which Dewing attended and was deeply influenced by. It is not surprising then that Dewing completed his first pastel in 1890; his first recorded sale of such a drawing took place in 1893.
Initially, Dewing’s drawings were small in size like Whistler’s, and he created them for individual clients. Later he produced pastels primarily for exhibition and used larger paper, measuring 15 x 11 ½ inches. After 1909 he began to number these drawings, so he could keep track of his works when he exhibited them.
Seated Lady in a Yellow Dress of c. 1915-20 is one of the larger pastels, numbered 104, that Dewing likely intended for public display. As with his other drawings, he used a fine paper that enhanced the delicacy and gossamer effects of his draftsmanship. The sitter’s face is shown in profile while the diaphanous quality of her dress is luminous. She is at once beautiful and yet utterly mysterious.
Much of the subject matter in Dewing’s oeuvre was devoted to the idea of the “ideal woman,” and this pastel is no exception. The figure’s attenuated limbs and elegant pose convey an air of dignity and stature, while her face remains arch and elusive, turned away from the viewer. Indeed, in 1901, an art critic praised Dewing as the only American painter who “succeeded in giving us pictures of women that might stand for the ‘ideal American’ type.”1
Dewing’s focus on his distinctive and complex ideas about female beauty were defining. For him, the ideal woman was detached and ethereal; she existed in a rarified world that defied real time and space. More often, he focused on his sitters’ dresses and poses than on the specific characteristics of their faces. In Seated Lady in a Yellow Dress, the pastel strokes that make up the dress are deft and confident, yet also economical. The soft yellow and blue hues that emerge from the brown paper have a haunting effect. Both the chair and model’s face are subordinate to the beauty and minutiae of her raiment. This work, and so many of Dewing’s pastels and paintings, was primarily aesthetic in intention. “To see beautifully,” was everything to the artist, and so here beauty abounds.2
1 Susan Hobbs, The Art of Thomas Wilmer Dewing: Beauty Reconfigured, exh. cat. (1996), p. 1.
2 Ibid.
Initially, Dewing’s drawings were small in size like Whistler’s, and he created them for individual clients. Later he produced pastels primarily for exhibition and used larger paper, measuring 15 x 11 ½ inches. After 1909 he began to number these drawings, so he could keep track of his works when he exhibited them.
Seated Lady in a Yellow Dress of c. 1915-20 is one of the larger pastels, numbered 104, that Dewing likely intended for public display. As with his other drawings, he used a fine paper that enhanced the delicacy and gossamer effects of his draftsmanship. The sitter’s face is shown in profile while the diaphanous quality of her dress is luminous. She is at once beautiful and yet utterly mysterious.
Much of the subject matter in Dewing’s oeuvre was devoted to the idea of the “ideal woman,” and this pastel is no exception. The figure’s attenuated limbs and elegant pose convey an air of dignity and stature, while her face remains arch and elusive, turned away from the viewer. Indeed, in 1901, an art critic praised Dewing as the only American painter who “succeeded in giving us pictures of women that might stand for the ‘ideal American’ type.”1
Dewing’s focus on his distinctive and complex ideas about female beauty were defining. For him, the ideal woman was detached and ethereal; she existed in a rarified world that defied real time and space. More often, he focused on his sitters’ dresses and poses than on the specific characteristics of their faces. In Seated Lady in a Yellow Dress, the pastel strokes that make up the dress are deft and confident, yet also economical. The soft yellow and blue hues that emerge from the brown paper have a haunting effect. Both the chair and model’s face are subordinate to the beauty and minutiae of her raiment. This work, and so many of Dewing’s pastels and paintings, was primarily aesthetic in intention. “To see beautifully,” was everything to the artist, and so here beauty abounds.2
1 Susan Hobbs, The Art of Thomas Wilmer Dewing: Beauty Reconfigured, exh. cat. (1996), p. 1.
2 Ibid.
Provenance
William Gwinn Mather, Cleveland, Ohio, by 1920;Elizabeth Ring and William Gwinn Mather Fund, Cleveland, Ohio;
Christie's, New York, Important American Paintings, Drawings, and Sculpture, May 21, 2008, lot 69
Exhibitions
Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., Special Exhibition of Drawings in Pastel and Silverpoint by Thomas W. Dewing, December 16, 1923–January 20, 1924, no. 2, lent by William G. Mather.Baltimore Museum of Art, An Exhibition of Paintings, Drawings, Sculpture by American Artists. . .Drawings in Pastel and Silver Point by Thomas W. Dewing, Gallery E, February 12–March 9, 1924, no. 89.
Avery Galleries, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, Circling Chase: The Art and Influence of William Merritt Chase and the Pursuit of Modernity, October 30-December 11, 2008.
Literature
Christina Miller Cocroft, "Thomas Wilmer Dewing: The Man and His Art," Master's thesis, George Washington University, Washington, D.C., 1971, no. 170.Nicole Amoroso, Circling Chase: The Art and Influence of William Merritt Chase and the Pursuit of Modernity (2008), pp. 14-15, cat. 7.
Susan A. Hobbs with Shoshanna Abeles, Thomas Wilmer Dewing: Beauty into Art: A Catalogue Raisonne, Volume II, Works on Paper (Yale University Press, 2018), pp. 882-883, no. 500.