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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Walter Sickert, Woman Seated at a Window, 1908-9, c.

Walter Sickert

Woman Seated at a Window, 1908-9, c.
Oil on canvas
52 x 40 cm
20 1/2 x 15 3/4 in

The Petit Palais, Paris
 
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Woman Seated at a Window is a canonical example of Sickert’s Camden Town period. It was included in Southampton City Art Gallery’s important Festival of Britain exhibition, The Camden Town Group (1951), and displays the complex painterly qualities and troubled emotion of the figure work he made between 1906 and 1914. The Camden Town nudes of Sickert exhibit a variety of moods ranging from the grotesque to the erotic. Many contain an element of threat, a subject adopted later on by Francis Bacon who in fact owned a comparable work by Sickert, Granby Street (c. 1912–13, Private Collection). In Woman Seated at a Window, the artist’s model is mostly clothed and adopts a thoughtful posture. Unlike his more frankly sexual works such as La Hollandaise (c. 1906, Tate Collection) and Mornington Crescent Nude (c. 1907, Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge), the painting explores the intimacy of a private moment. Sitting alone, the woman turns to one side in the darkened room and gazes through the window. Unlike Sickert’s paintings of recumbent prostitutes, this work and others like it show the compassionate side to the artist’s nature. Though Sickert started acquiring London studios in 1905, at one time having possession of three at once, it was not until 1906 that he started to re-establish himself in the London art world after his years abroad in France and Italy. Woman Seated at a Window was most likely executed at 6 Mornington Crescent. The double-banded pattern of the balcony railing outside the window, also visible in Little Rachel (1907, Tate Collection), is a telling detail in respect to location. Moreover, in the summer of 1907 the artist wrote to his friend Nan Hudson, ‘This is to tell you I have got entangled in a batch of a dozen or so interiors on the first floor here. A typical lodgings first-floor.’ He considered this batch important enough to postpone his annual visit to Dieppe. Woman Seated at a Window was plausibly one of that ‘dozen or so’ pictures executed at Mornington Crescent. The work was first gifted by Sickert to his friend the painter Sylvia Gosse. They met in Sickert’s art school at Rowlandson House where Gosse was a student and remained close friends until the end of Sickert’s life in 1942. Among the other fine gifts that she received from Sickert was Café des Tribunaux, Dieppe (c. 1890, Tate Collection).
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Provenance

Sylvia Gosse, gift of the artist
Dr Robert Emmons
Thomas Agnew & Sons, London
Roland, Browse & Delbanco, London, 1945
E. Michael Behrens, 1947
Private Collection
Fine Art Society, London, 2000
Private Collection, USA
Private Collection, promised to the Paris Musées in memory of Delphine Lévy, 2021

Exhibitions

1941, London, National Gallery, Sickert, dates unknown, cat. no. 89 (listed as 'Mornington Crescent')
1947, London, Thomas Agnew & Sons, Exhibition of Paintings and Drawings by W.R. Sickert from the Collection of Robert Emmons, May - June 1947, cat. no. 48 (listed as 'Granby Street')
1951, Southampton, Southampton Art Gallery, Festival of Britain: The Camden Town Group, 16 June - 29 July 1951
1953, Edinburgh, Scottish Committee of the Arts Council of Great Britain, Diploma Galleries of the Royal Scottish Academy, An Exhibition of Paintings and Drawings by Walter Sickert, Jan. 1953, cat. no. 29
1960, London, Tate Gallery; Southampton, Southampton Art Gallery; and Bradford, Bradford City Art Gallery, Sickert: Paintings and Drawings, 18 May - 19 June 1960; 2 - 24 July; and 30 July - 20 Aug. 1960, cat. no. 116
1981, London, Browse & Darby, Sickert, 25 Nov. - 22 Dec. 1981, cat. no. 18
1992, London, Browse & Darby, Sickert: With an Accent on the Theatre, 26 Nov. - 23 Dec. 1992, cat. no. 55
1994, London, Theo Waddington Fine Art, Helen Lessore: Artist & Art Dealer, 16 Nov. - 20 Dec. 1994, cat. no. 60 (listed as 'A Seated Woman, Granby Street')
2000, London, Fine Art Society, Walter Sickert: Paintings, Drawings and Prints, 8 May - 15 June 2000, cat. no. 14
2011, London, Fine Art Society, Centenary Exhibition: The Camden Town Group, 15 June - 16 July 2011, cat. no. 3 (listed as 'Seated Woman, Mornington Crescent')
2021, London, Piano Nobile, Sickert: The Theatre of Life, 24 Sept. - 17 Dec. 2021, cat. no. 13

Literature

Lillian Browse, Sickert, Faber & Faber, 1943, pl. 35
Lillian Browse, Sickert, Rupert Hart-Davis, 1960, p. 74, pl. 57 (illus.)

John Rothenstein, Walter Richard Sickert (1860-1942), Beaverbrook Newspapers, 1961, pl. 7 (illus.)
Marjorie Lilly, Sickert: The Painter and his Circle, Elek, 1971, pl. 37 (illus.)

Helen Lessore: Artist & Art Dealer, exh. cat., Theo Waddington Fine Art, 1994, cat. no. 60, p. 29 (col. illus.)
Wendy Baron, Sickert: Paintings and Drawings, Yale University Press, 2006, cat. no. 353, pp. 371-372 (col. illus.)

Wendy Baron, Luke Farey and Richard Shone, Sickert: The Theatre of Life, exh. cat., Piano Nobile Publications, 2021, cat. no. 13, pp. 80-81 (col. illus.)

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