Nocturne in Black and Gold, the Falling Rocket, oil painting created about 1875 by American-born artist James McNeill Whistler. This work is famous for having led to a lawsuit between Whistler, an instrumental figure within the English Aesthetic movement, and the art critic John Ruskin.
In 1877, when Nocturne in Black and Gold, the Falling Rocket was exhibited at the Grosvenor Gallery, Ruskin accused its artist of “flinging a pot of paint in the public’s face,” which led to the high-profile libel trial. Although Whistler successfully defended the painting, and by extension the set of aesthetic beliefs that the work embodied—that art was necessarily autonomous and not therefore constrained by a responsibility to inscribe a “lifelike” effect—he was awarded only the token sum of a farthing in damages, and this led to his bankruptcy.
Nocturne in Black and Gold, the Falling Rocket is one of six nighttime paintings loosely based on a site in London called the Cremorne Gardens. This was a popular park wherein various forms of entertainment took place, including fireworks displays. It is relatively easy to appreciate why this work proved to be so provocative. Rather than organize the painting around some form of figure/ground relation, Whistler instead creates a rather indeterminate pictorial impression given through the incandescent glow of the fireworks themselves. Without any overt figurative reference, the painting instead appears almost entirely abstract. It is this unwillingness to yield to received opinion, represented in this case by the critic Ruskin, that gives the painting its vitality as an image and ensures its preeminence in studies of the historical development of an abstract model of painting.