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314 pages, Paperback
First published February 27, 2024
Chloé was then purchased by Dr Thomas Fitzgerald of Lonsdale Street, Melbourne, for 850 guineas. In 1883, Fitzgeraldloanedlent the painting to the National Gallery of Victoria, which had recently opened on Sundays for the first time. As the only full female nude on display at the gallery, Chloé drew criticism from advocates of Sabbatarianism, so it was taken down after only three weeks.Chloé on display at the National Gallery of Victoria, 1883 (Wikipedia)
In response, members of the bohemian artists' society, the Buonarotti Club, protested to the press, including artist Alexander Colquhoun, who wrote satirical verse urging the gallery to rehang the painting.
Upon Fitzgerald's death in 1908, the painting was purchased at auction by Henry Figsby Young, owner of the Young and Jackson Hotel. In 1908, Young installed the painting in the hotel's saloon bar. (Wikipedia's Chloé page, lightly edited to remove unnecessary links and footnotes and correct the noun used as a verb).
Chloe at Young and Jackson's (Wikipedia)Chloé captivated many soldiers who frequented the bar of Young and Jackson's Hotel during World War I, World War II, the Korean War and the Vietnam War. Letters were addressed to her from the trenches in Turkey, France, and Papua New Guinea, promising to return to her. American soldiers even went as far as coming up with a plan to abduct her.