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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Walter Sickert, "Mr Johnson" (The Small Plate), 1911, c.
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Walter Sickert, "Mr Johnson" (The Small Plate), 1911, c.

Walter Sickert

"Mr Johnson" (The Small Plate), 1911, c.
Etching on laid paper
Plate: 14 x 9.8 cm / 5 1/2 x 3 7/8 in
Sheet: 28.4 x 24.2 cm / 11 1/8 x 9 1/2 in
First state (of four)
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Further images

  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 1 ) Walter Sickert, "Mr Johnson" (The Small Plate), 1911, c.
  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 2 ) Walter Sickert, "Mr Johnson" (The Small Plate), 1911, c.
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In a letter to Ethel Sands, Sickert immodestly described “Mr Johnson” and two others as ‘perfect etchings’. Only rarely in Sickert’s printmaking activities did he make a drawing and then...
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In a letter to Ethel Sands, Sickert immodestly described “Mr Johnson” and two others as ‘perfect etchings’. Only rarely in Sickert’s printmaking activities did he make a drawing and then realise the subject in etching alone. A quill-and-ink drawing of “Mr Johnson” was perhaps intended for the weekly New Age magazine, which reproduced fifteen drawings by Sickert as full-page illustrations between January and June 1912, many of them in the same quill-pen style. It was never published, however. The drawing correlates closely with the mark-making of this related etching, which even replicates the idiosyncratic pattern of the carpet at the lower right-hand corner. On the back wall Sickert quoted an Italian phrase, written down for him by Degas, and this occurs in both the drawing and the print: Fare tutti mestieri svergognati per campar onoratamente (‘practise all shameful trades to live honourably’). The visual emphasis of handwriting in the print is heightened by contrast with the professional letter engraving added when the Carfax Gallery published the etching in 1915. Wendy Baron suggests the woman combing her hair in the background is Mr Johnson’s mistress; Ruth Bromberg supposed that the woman had resorted to prostitution, which makes Mr Johnson either her pimp or her customer. Unlike other lettered titles in the Carfax series, the man’s name is printed in inverted commas as “Mr Johnson”. This might imply an assumed identity and a desire for anonymity, motivated either by shame or professional criminality.
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Provenance

Ruth and Joseph Bromberg
The Fine Art Society, London, 2004
The Herbert and Ann Lucas Collection, Los Angeles, May 2005

Exhibitions

London, The Fine Art Society, The Ruth and Joseph Bromberg Collection of Sickert Prints and Drawings, 21 Sept. – 21 Oct. 2004, cat. no. 60*

London, Piano Nobile, Sickert: Love, Death & Ennui. The Herbert and Ann Lucas Collection, 26 Sept. – 19 Dec. 2025, no. 32*

Literature

Ruth Bromberg, Walter Sickert: Prints: A Catalogue Raisonné, Yale University Press, 2000, cat. no. 145, p. 160 (illus.)

The Ruth and Joseph Bromberg Collection of Sickert Prints and Drawings, exh. cat., The Fine Art Society, 2004, cat. no. 60, p. 55 (this impression col. illus.)*

Wendy Baron, Sickert: Paintings and Drawings, Yale University Press, 2006, cat. no. 373.2, p. 382

Kate Aspinall, Luke Farey and Stuart Lucas, Sickert: Love, Death & Ennui. The Herbert and Ann Lucas Collection, exh. cat., Piano Nobile, 2025, no. 32, p. 78 (col. illus.)*

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