John Singer Sargent
(January
12, 1856
– April 14, 1925)
was the most successful portrait painter of his era, as well
as a gifted landscape painter and watercolorist. Sargent was
born in Florence, Italy
to American parents. He studied in Italy
and Germany,
and then in Paris
under Emile Auguste Carolus-Duran.
Sargent studied with
Carolus-Duran, whose influence would be pivotal, from
1874-1878. Carolus-Duran's atelier was progressive,
dispensing with the traditional academic approach which
required careful drawing and underpainting, in favor of the
alla prima method of working directly on the canvas with a
loaded brush, derived from Diego Velázquez.
It was an approach which relied on the proper placement of
tones of paint.
In 1879 Sargent painted a portrait of
Carolus-Duran; the virtuoso effort met with public approval,
and announced the direction his mature work would take. Its
showing at the Paris Salon
was both a tribute to his teacher and an advertisement for
portrait commissions. Of Sargent's early work, Henry James
wrote that the artist offered 'the slightly "uncanny"
spectacle of a talent which on the very threshold of its
career has nothing more to learn'.
Portraits In the early 1880s Sargent regularly
exhibited portraits at the Salon, and these were mostly
full-length portrayals of women: Madame Edouard Pailleron
in 1880, Madame Ramón Subercaseaux in 1881, and
Lady with the Rose, 1882. He continued to receive
positive critical notice.
Sargent's best
portraits reveal the individuality and personality of the
sitters; his most ardent admirers think he is matched in
this only by Velázquez, who was one of Sargent's great
influences. The Spanish master's spell is apparent in
Sargent's
The Daughters of Edward Darley Boit, 1882,
a haunting interior which echoes Velázquez'
Las Meninas.
Sargent's
Portrait of Madame X,
done in 1884,
is now considered one of his best works, and was the
artist's personal favorite; eventually Sargent sold it to
the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
However, at the time it was unveiled in Paris at the 1884
Salon, it aroused such a negative reaction that it prompted
Sargent to move to London.[6]
Prior to the Mme. X. scandal of 1884, he had painted exotic
beauties such as Rosina Ferrara
of Capri,
and the Spanish expatriate model,
Carmela Bertagna,
but the earlier pictures had not been intended for broad
public reception.
Before his arrival in England Sargent
began sending paintings for exhibition at the Royal Academy.
These included the portraits of Dr. Pozzi at Home,
1881, a flamboyant essay in red, and the more traditional
Mrs. Henry White, 1883. The ensuing portrait commissions
encouraged Sargent to finalize his move to London in 1886.[7]
His first major success at the Royal Academy came in 1887,
with the enthusiastic response to
Carnation, Lily, Lily, Rose,
a large piece, painted on site, of two young girls lighting
lanterns in an English garden. The painting was immediately
purchased by the Tate Gallery.
In 1894 Sargent was elected an associate of the Royal
Academy, and was made a full member three years later. In
the 1890s he averaged fourteen portrait commissions per
year, none more beautiful than the genteel
Lady Agnew of Lochnaw,
1892. As a portrait painter in the grand manner, Sargent's
success was unmatched; his subjects were at once ennobled
and often possessed of nervous energy (Mrs. Hugh
Hammersley, 1892). With little fear of contradiction,
Sargent was referred to as 'the Van Dyck of our times'.
Sargent painted a
series of three portraits of Robert Louis Stevenson.
The second,
Portrait of Robert Louis Stevenson and
his Wife (1885), was
one of his best known. He also completed portraits of
two U.S. presidents: Theodore Roosevelt
and Woodrow Wilson.
Other Work During the greater
part of Sargent's career, he created roughly 900 oil
paintings and more than 2,000 watercolours, as well as
countless sketches and charcoal drawings. From 1907 on
Sargent forsook portrait painting and focused on landscapes
in his later years; he also sculpted later in life. His
oeuvre documents worldwide travel, from Venice to the Tyrol,
Corfu, Montana and Florida, and each destination offered
pictorial treasure. As a concession to the insatiable demand
of wealthy patrons for portraits, however, he continued to
dash off rapid charcoal portrait sketches for them, which he
called "Mugs". Forty-six of these, spanning the years
1890-1916, were exhibited at the Royal Society of Portrait Painters
in 1916.
Sargent is usually not
thought of as an Impressionist
painter, but he sometimes used impressionistic techniques to
great effect, and his
Claude Monet Painting at the Edge of a
Wood is rendered in his
own version of the impressionist style.
Although Sargent was an American
expatriate, he returned to the United States many times,
often to answer the demand for commissioned portraits. Many
of his most important works are in museums in the U.S.; in
1909 he exhibited eighty-six watercolours in New York City,
eighty-three of which were bought by the Brooklyn Museum.
His mural decorations grace the Boston Public Library..
For this commission, a series of oils on the theme of The
Triumph of Religion that were attached to the walls of
the library by means of marouflage,
Sargent made numerous visits to the United States in the
last decade of his life, including a stay of two full years
from 1915-1917.
It is in some of his late works where
one senses Sargent painting most purely for himself. His
watercolors, often of landscapes documenting his travels (Santa
Maria della Salute, 1904, Brooklyn Museum of Art),
were executed with a joyful fluidness. In watercolours and
oils he portrayed his friends and family dressed in Orientalist
costume, relaxing in brightly lit landscapes that allowed
for a more vivid palette and experimental handling than did
his commissions (The Chess Game, 1906).
Relationships Among the
artists with whom Sargent associated were Dennis Miller Bunker, Carroll Beckwith, Edwin Austin Abbey
(who also worked on the Boston Public Library
murals), Francis David Millet, Wilfrid de Glehn, Jane Emmet de Glehn
and Claude Monet,
whom Sargent painted. Sargent developed a life-long
friendship with fellow painter Paul César Helleu,
whom he met in Paris in 1878 when Sargent was 22 and Helleu
was 18. Sargent painted both Helleu and his wife Alice on
several occasions, most memorably in the impressionistic
Paul Helleu Sketching with his Wife, 1889. His
supporters included Henry James, Isabella Stewart Gardner
(who commissioned and purchased works from Sargent, and
sought his advice on other acquisitions), and Edward VII,
whose recommendation for knighthood the artist declined.
Sargent was extremely private
regarding his personal life, although the painter Jacques-Émile
Blanche, who was one of his early sitters, said after his
death that Sargent's sex life "was notorious in Paris, and
in Venice, positively scandalous. He was a frenzied bugger."
The truth of this may never be established. Some scholars
have suggested that Sargent was homosexual. He had personal
associations with Prince Edmond de Polignac and Count Robert
de Montesquiou. His male nudes reveal complex and
well-considered artistic sensibilities about the male
physique and male sensuality; this can be particularly
observed in his portrait of Thomas E. McKeller, but
also in Tommies Bathing, nude sketches for Hell
and Judgement, and his portraits of young men, like
Bartholomy Maganosco and Head of Olimpio Fusco.
However, there were many friendships with women, as well,
and a similar sensualism informs his female portrait and
figure studies (notably Egyptian Girl, 1891). The
likelihood of an affair with Louise Burkhardt, the model for
Lady with the Rose, is accepted by Sargent scholars.
Assessment In a time when
the art world focused, in turn, on Impressionism, Fauvism,
and Cubism,
Sargent practiced his own form of Realism,
which brilliantly referenced Velázquez, Van Dyck,
and Gainsborough.
His seemingly effortless facility for paraphrasing the
masters in a contemporary fashion led to a stream of
commissioned portraits of remarkable virtuosity (Arsène
Vigeant, 1885,
Musées de Metz ;
Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Newton
Phelps-Stokes, 1897,
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York) and earned Sargent the
moniker, "the Van Dyck
of our times." Still, during his life his work
engendered critical responses from some of his colleagues: Camille Pissarro
wrote "he is not an enthusiast but rather an adroit
performer", and Walter Sickert
published a satirical turn under the heading "Sargentolatry".
By the time of his death he was dismissed as an anachronism,
a relic of the Gilded Age
and out of step with the artistic sentiments of post-World
War I Europe. Foremost of
Sargent's detractors was the influential English art critic Roger Fry,
of the Bloomsbury Group,
who at the 1926 Sargent retrospective in London
dismissed Sargent's work as lacking aesthetic quality.
Despite a long period of critical
disfavor, Sargent's popularity has increased steadily since
the 1960s, and Sargent has been the subject of recent
large-scale exhibitions in major museums, including a
retrospective exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art
in 1986, and a 1999 "blockbuster" travelling show that
exhibited at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston,
the National Gallery of Art Washington,
and the National Gallery, London.
It has been suggested that the exotic
qualities inherent in his work appealed to the
sympathies of the Jewish clients whom he painted from the
1890s on. Nowhere is this more apparent than in his portrait
Almina, Daughter of Asher Wertheimer (1908), in which
the subject is seen wearing a Persian
costume, a pearl encrusted turban, and strumming an Indian sarod,
accoutrements all meant to convey sensuality and mystery. If
Sargent used this portrait to explore issues of sexuality
and identity, it seems to have met with the satisfaction of
the subject's father, Asher Wertheimer, a wealthy Jewish art
dealer living in London, who commissioned from Sargent a
series of a dozen portraits of his family, the artist's
largest commission from a single patron. The paintings
reveal a pleasant familiarity between the artist and his
subjects. Wertheimer bequeathed most of the paintings to the National Gallery.
John Singer Sargent is interred in Brookwood Cemetery
near
Woking, Surrey