How you can use this image
This image has been made available under a Creative Commons Zero licence (CC0). This means it can be used in any way, for commercial or non-commercial purposes.
Please acknowledge the collection who own the work with a photo credit — this helps spread the word about their resources.
To learn more about image reuse and Creative Commons, please see our image use page.
DownloadNotes
Add or edit a note on this artwork that only you can see. You can find notes again by going to the ‘Notes’ section of your account.
Walter Richard Sickert spent the winter and spring of 1903–1904 in Venice, where he had been a regular visitor since 1895. Forced indoors by the incessant rain that winter, he hired prostitutes to pose for him in the dingy apartment he had rented for the season near the Rialto, which served as his studio. He referred to each of them by a nickname. In this case he dubbed his model 'La Giuseppina', and she became his favorite, regularly sitting for him as he worked diligently from 9 to 11 am and 1 to 4 pm each day. In a letter to a fellow artist, Sickert described 'the uninterrupted pleasure of these kind, obliging little models' and how they liked to amuse him 'with smutty talk while posing like angels'. It was in Venice that Sickert first began painting figures in domestic interiors inspired by the example of his mentor, Edgar Degas.
Title
La Giuseppina
Date
1903–1904
Medium
oil on canvas
Measurements
H 54.6 x W 46.2 cm
Accession number
B1979.37.2
Acquisition method
Paul Mellon Fund
Work type
Painting
Signature/marks description
signed in black paint, lower left: Sickert
Yale Center for British Art
1080 Chapel Street, New Haven, Connecticut 06510-2302, USA,
Stories
-
Image credit: Manchester Art Gallery
The enduring…Chris Mugan