Joanna "Jo" Hiffernan (ca. 1843 – after 1903) was an Irish artists' model and
muse who was romantically linked with American painter James Abbott McNeill Whistler and French painter
and Sir Pitt from Vanity Fair. The Pennells also described him as "a teacher of polite chirography (calligraphy)" who used to speak of Whistler as "me son-in-law."Her mother, Katherine Hiffernan, died in 1862, aged 44. Joanna Hiffernan had a sister called Bridget Agnes Hiffernan, later Singleton. The artist Walter Greaves
like whistler by peter french

and she went on to have a 6-year relationship with him, during which period she modeled for some of his most famous paintings. Physically striking, Hiffernan's personality was even more impressive. Whistler's biographers and friends, the Pennells, wrote of her,"She was not only beautiful. She was intelligent, she was sympathetic. She gave Whistler the constant companionship he could not do without."Whistler's family did not approve of Hiffernan, as unmarried artists' models, and especially those who posed nude, were considered at that time to be little better than prostitutes.
Hiffernan seems only to have modelled for friends, so perhaps the objections to her made by Whistler's family were based more on social class than on Hifferman's personal character. below whistlers white house
When Whistler's mother visited from America in 1864, alternative accommodation had to be found for Hiffernan, who also seems to have been the cause of Whistler's quarrel with Alphonse Legros in 1863.

She was in France with Whistler during the summer of 1861, and while in Paris during the winter of 1861–62 she sat for Symphony in White, No. I: The White Girl at a studio in
Boulevard des Batignolles and in 1864–65 she posed for Symphony in White, No. 2:
Little White Girl. It is possible that this is when she met Whistler's friend and fellow artist, Gustave Courbet, for whom she later modeled. There is some thought that she was the model for Courbet's L'Origine du monde, which depicts a nude woman's vulva.Hiffernan attended séances with Whistler at
Dante Gabriel Rossetti's house in Chelsea
in 1863, and spent the summer and autumn of 1865 in Trouville
with Whistler. In 1866, Whistler gave Hiffernan power of attorney over his affairs while he was in Valparaiso
for seven months, making provision for household expenses and giving her the authority to act as an agent in the sale of his works.During Whistler's absence, Hiffernan travelled to Paris and posed for Courbet in The Sleepers, or Le Sommeil which depicts two naked women in bed asleep. It is likely that she had an affair with Courbet
at this time,After the end of his relationship with Hiffernan, Whistler returned to the United States, but left a will in her favour.In addition to being an artists' model, Hiffernan herself also drew and painted.
After she and Whistler parted, Hiffernan helped to raise Whistler's son, Charles James Whistler Hanson (1870–1935), the result of an affair with a parlour maid, Louisa Fanny Hanson. He lived with Hiffernan at 5 Thistle Grove as late as 1880 when Whistler was away in Venice with Maud Franklin,
Little is known of Hiffernan after 1880. A woman reported to Juliette Courbet (1831–1915), the sister of Gustave Courbet, in a letter of 18 December 1882, that "the beautiful Irish girl" was in Nice, where she sold antiques and some pictures by Courbet. It is believed that Hiffernan married a man named Abbot some time after 1881, possibly on the Continent.
The art collector Charles Lang Freer met Hiffernan when he was a pallbearer at Whistler's funeral in 1903
when she came forward in heavy mourning to pay her last respects(whjistlers funeral)
above whistlers house in london by peter french
"As she raised her veil and I saw ... the thick wavy hair, although it was streaked with gray, I knew at once it was Johanna, the Johanna of Etretat, 'la belle Irlandaise' that Courbet hadpainted with her wonderful hair and a mirror in her hand.... She stood for a long time beside the coffin—nearly an hour I should think.... I could not help being touched by the feeling she
showed toward her old friend. "Did Maud [Franklin] come?" [Havemeyer] asked. "Yes" answered Mr. Freer, "the same afternoon. She had come all the way from Paris and was very much affected as I uncovered Whistler's face for her to see him." ... [One could see, Freer (below whistlers funeral 1903
)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t9h7oB0TpLY&feature=sharemused] "that the real drama of [Whistler's] life was bound up in the love of [these] devoted women."
mused] "that the real drama of [Whistler's] life was bound up in the love of [these] devoted women."
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