WHISTLER, James Abbot McNeill: Nocturne in Black and Gold: The Falling Rocket
The painting depicts a fireworks display over the Thames in London, reduced to shimmering abstractions of color and light that prioritize mood and atmosphere over detail. Whistler's radical vision—treating paint itself as the subject matter rather than a window into the world—challenged Victorian artistic conventions and foreshadowed modernism, though it sparked fierce controversy, most famously in his libel suit against critic John Ruskin, who dismissed the work as unfinished.