Henry, yes he certainly did develop his sketches in the studio. For the Collins Music Hall painting (which emerged from his earlier sketches) Wendy Baron notes that there are two extant drawings "both fully realized studies of the whole scene, stage and audience". One is a watercolour reminiscent of some of his sketches and one is in pencil, pen and ink (although in respect of this drawing Baron says that it "may well have been drawn from, rather than in preparation for, the painting").
I rather think there is a distinction being made by Baron between a 'drawing' and a 'sketch' and I suspect that she uses the word 'sketch" to describe a study made from life and a 'drawing' as a more developed study, evidently made from an earlier sketch. Certainly, as you say, an expert would be able to spot the difference.
However, even if that is not correct, unless sleekviper responds with something said by Wendy Baron in her 2006 book, I am going to humbly declare myself 100% right and sleekviper 100% wrong because his original post in the thread, about which I was complaining, gave the impression that his authority was Wendy Baron's 2006 book. It was this, I believe, which induced Fisherman to suggest that Cornwell was wrong to claim that Sickert was in London in late September/early October 1888. But my point is that Wendy Baron does not support him, so unless you or he can show that Wendy Baron says in her book that Sickert made sketches of sketches - let alone that he annotated such sketches with the location despite being drawn in his studio - then he's wrong and I'm not!
I rather think there is a distinction being made by Baron between a 'drawing' and a 'sketch' and I suspect that she uses the word 'sketch" to describe a study made from life and a 'drawing' as a more developed study, evidently made from an earlier sketch. Certainly, as you say, an expert would be able to spot the difference.
However, even if that is not correct, unless sleekviper responds with something said by Wendy Baron in her 2006 book, I am going to humbly declare myself 100% right and sleekviper 100% wrong because his original post in the thread, about which I was complaining, gave the impression that his authority was Wendy Baron's 2006 book. It was this, I believe, which induced Fisherman to suggest that Cornwell was wrong to claim that Sickert was in London in late September/early October 1888. But my point is that Wendy Baron does not support him, so unless you or he can show that Wendy Baron says in her book that Sickert made sketches of sketches - let alone that he annotated such sketches with the location despite being drawn in his studio - then he's wrong and I'm not!
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