A Pot of Paint reconstructs the lost transcript and revisits the highly contested issues surrounding one of the most celebrated trials in the history of art. A libel suit brought in the London courts by American expatriate artist James McNeill Whistler against John Ruskin, England's most powerful art critic, the trial was essentially a debate of aesthetic theory conducted at a critical hour in the evolution of modern art. After viewing an 1877 exhibition that included some of Whistler's most abstract works, Ruskin declared in print that the artist had flung "a pot of paint in the public's face." He called Whistler a "coxcomb" and said that it was the height of "cockney impudence" to ask two hundred guineas for a painting such as Nocturne in Black and The Falling Rocket. The dispute was fully covered in the popular press. Using those newspaper accounts, as well as letters, legal papers, Ruskin's instructions to his counsel, and Whistler's later rendition of events in The Gentle Art of Making Enemies, Linda Merrill reveals the deeply held, contrary aesthetic ideals of the two parties, and shows that, in many ways, the real litigants in Whistler v. Ruskin were traditional, representational art and art that tended toward abstraction. During eighteen months of pretrial delays and two days of testimony from Whistler and several well-known figures in the art world, London debated the value and the meaning of art. A Pot of Paint retrieves these debates for a society that continues to argue the merits of innovation in art and the place of art in the modern world.
As far as art historical texts go, this book goes crazy. Fascinating subject matter, skillful and clear prose, impressive compilation of what seems like a whole lot of research work. To me this is one of the more poetic, can't-make-it-up spectacles in Western art history-- Whistler v. Ruskin. It feels like watching your favorite boxer, old and washed up, going one more fight than he should have, except they're both your favorite boxer. The whole thing is as sad to watch as it is interesting, and nobody is happy with that outcome. Linda Merrill has a really thoughtful play by play analysis, with big conclusions that really help me to understand Victorian art and how Whistler threatened to overturn it.