Walter Sickert
Femme de lettres
, 1913/14
Charcoal/paper
15.20 x 15.98 inches
Inscribed and Signed
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Provenance
Sir Hugh Walpole J.S. Wright Sale; Christie's, London, 21 May 1954, lot 20 With Roland, Browse and Delbanco, London, 1958 M.F. Williams Dennis Matthews Miss Bertha J. MacLennan Private Collection, U.K.
Exhibitions
London, Arts Council of Great Britain, Sickert, 1960, cat.no.129 (where lent by Miss Bertha J. MacLennan)
Literature
Anthony Bertram, Sickert: World's Masters - New Series, Studio Publications, London, 1955, pl.18 Wendy Baron, Sickert, Paintings & Drawings, Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 2006, cat.no.401 (ill.b&w)
Signed and inscribed 'Wellington House Hampd Rd/Sickert' (lower right) 'Ethel Sands told me that Gilman modelled for the male figure; she felt it would be improper to tell me who modelled for the girl sitting on his lap. Bromberg, in discussing the meaning of the title, suggested that the "letters" in question may have been a pun for "French letters". I believe the allusion was more direct, if a trifle ironic, and that the model was Enid Bagnold, in 1912 not only a pupil of Sickert at Rowlandson House but a journalist writing for Hearth and Home, which was edited by the notorious philanderer Frank Harris (to whom she lost her heart and her virginity). The girl in Femme de Lettres resembles Miss Bagnold.' (Wendy Baron, Sickert, Paintings & Drawings, Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 2006).