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Arrangements in White and Red

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Arrangements in White and Red. / Spooner, Catherine.
In: Volupte, Vol. 6, No. 2, 18.12.2023, p. 141-151.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Vancouver

Spooner C. Arrangements in White and Red. Volupte. 2023 Dec 18;6(2):141-151. doi: 10.25602/GOLD.v.v6i2.1759.g1869 volupte.gold.

Author

Spooner, Catherine. / Arrangements in White and Red. In: Volupte. 2023 ; Vol. 6, No. 2. pp. 141-151.

Bibtex

@article{f1973a95ad4c4b9fb409417aa1cbd4a0,
title = "Arrangements in White and Red",
abstract = "This short story responds to the Royal Academy{\textquoteright}s exhibition Whistler{\textquoteright}s Woman in White: Joanna Hiffernan (2022) by centring Hiffernan{\textquoteright}s role in the creation of Whistler{\textquoteright}s Symphony in White No. 2: The Little White Girl (1864). At the time that Whistler and Hiffernan were collaborating on this painting, they were also attending s{\'e}ances at their neighbour Dante Gabriel Rossetti{\textquoteright}s house, where Rossetti attempted to contact the ghost of his dead wife Elizabeth Siddal. The story takes note of Whistler{\textquoteright}s comment that Hiffernan was {\textquoteleft}a bit of a medium{\textquoteright} (Macdonald 2022: 23). It reflects on the ghostly and spectral properties of the white dress and the different ways in which clothing haunts its protagonists. It also considers the different ways in which fabric, or canvas, can be marked – through blood stains, dirt and brush strokes. In doing so it restores Hiffernan{\textquoteright}s imagined perspective to the account of the painting{\textquoteright}s creation, drawing connections between modelling, and the s{\'e}ance, as kinds of performance.The story is informed by my ongoing research into the cultural history of the white dress (monograph forthcoming with Bloomsbury in 2024-5). It draws on William Michael Rossetti{\textquoteright}s record of later s{\'e}ances held by his brother, recently brought to scholarly attention by J.B. Bullen, Rosalind White and J.A. Beaky in Pre-Raphaelites in the Spirit World (2021) as well as on Margaret F. Macdonald{\textquoteright}s revisionary work on Hiffernan{\textquoteright}s role in the creation of the Symphony in White paintings (2022) and other biographical accounts of her relationship with Whistler. It uses fiction as an alternative means of thinking through cultural constructions of whiteness, by embedding them in specific points of view and moments of emotional affect, not readily accounted for in academic writing. It is accompanied by a brief reflective commentary elucidating the research process. ",
keywords = "creative writing, short story, Neo-Victorian literature, historical fiction, history of art, James McNeill Whistler, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, spiritualism, ekphrasis, Gothic, nineteenth-century art, fashion, Joanna Hiffernan, biography, artist's model, white, ghost story, aestheticism",
author = "Catherine Spooner",
year = "2023",
month = dec,
day = "18",
doi = "10.25602/GOLD.v.v6i2.1759.g1869 volupte.gold.",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
pages = "141--151",
journal = "Volupte",
issn = "2515-0073",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Arrangements in White and Red

AU - Spooner, Catherine

PY - 2023/12/18

Y1 - 2023/12/18

N2 - This short story responds to the Royal Academy’s exhibition Whistler’s Woman in White: Joanna Hiffernan (2022) by centring Hiffernan’s role in the creation of Whistler’s Symphony in White No. 2: The Little White Girl (1864). At the time that Whistler and Hiffernan were collaborating on this painting, they were also attending séances at their neighbour Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s house, where Rossetti attempted to contact the ghost of his dead wife Elizabeth Siddal. The story takes note of Whistler’s comment that Hiffernan was ‘a bit of a medium’ (Macdonald 2022: 23). It reflects on the ghostly and spectral properties of the white dress and the different ways in which clothing haunts its protagonists. It also considers the different ways in which fabric, or canvas, can be marked – through blood stains, dirt and brush strokes. In doing so it restores Hiffernan’s imagined perspective to the account of the painting’s creation, drawing connections between modelling, and the séance, as kinds of performance.The story is informed by my ongoing research into the cultural history of the white dress (monograph forthcoming with Bloomsbury in 2024-5). It draws on William Michael Rossetti’s record of later séances held by his brother, recently brought to scholarly attention by J.B. Bullen, Rosalind White and J.A. Beaky in Pre-Raphaelites in the Spirit World (2021) as well as on Margaret F. Macdonald’s revisionary work on Hiffernan’s role in the creation of the Symphony in White paintings (2022) and other biographical accounts of her relationship with Whistler. It uses fiction as an alternative means of thinking through cultural constructions of whiteness, by embedding them in specific points of view and moments of emotional affect, not readily accounted for in academic writing. It is accompanied by a brief reflective commentary elucidating the research process.

AB - This short story responds to the Royal Academy’s exhibition Whistler’s Woman in White: Joanna Hiffernan (2022) by centring Hiffernan’s role in the creation of Whistler’s Symphony in White No. 2: The Little White Girl (1864). At the time that Whistler and Hiffernan were collaborating on this painting, they were also attending séances at their neighbour Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s house, where Rossetti attempted to contact the ghost of his dead wife Elizabeth Siddal. The story takes note of Whistler’s comment that Hiffernan was ‘a bit of a medium’ (Macdonald 2022: 23). It reflects on the ghostly and spectral properties of the white dress and the different ways in which clothing haunts its protagonists. It also considers the different ways in which fabric, or canvas, can be marked – through blood stains, dirt and brush strokes. In doing so it restores Hiffernan’s imagined perspective to the account of the painting’s creation, drawing connections between modelling, and the séance, as kinds of performance.The story is informed by my ongoing research into the cultural history of the white dress (monograph forthcoming with Bloomsbury in 2024-5). It draws on William Michael Rossetti’s record of later séances held by his brother, recently brought to scholarly attention by J.B. Bullen, Rosalind White and J.A. Beaky in Pre-Raphaelites in the Spirit World (2021) as well as on Margaret F. Macdonald’s revisionary work on Hiffernan’s role in the creation of the Symphony in White paintings (2022) and other biographical accounts of her relationship with Whistler. It uses fiction as an alternative means of thinking through cultural constructions of whiteness, by embedding them in specific points of view and moments of emotional affect, not readily accounted for in academic writing. It is accompanied by a brief reflective commentary elucidating the research process.

KW - creative writing

KW - short story

KW - Neo-Victorian literature

KW - historical fiction

KW - history of art

KW - James McNeill Whistler

KW - Dante Gabriel Rossetti

KW - spiritualism

KW - ekphrasis

KW - Gothic

KW - nineteenth-century art

KW - fashion

KW - Joanna Hiffernan

KW - biography

KW - artist's model

KW - white

KW - ghost story

KW - aestheticism

U2 - 10.25602/GOLD.v.v6i2.1759.g1869 volupte.gold.

DO - 10.25602/GOLD.v.v6i2.1759.g1869 volupte.gold.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 6

SP - 141

EP - 151

JO - Volupte

JF - Volupte

SN - 2515-0073

IS - 2

ER -