“You might tell her that I
am a man of prodigious talent.”
John Singer Sargent
John Singer Sargent
The expatriate American artist John Singer Sargent
has the dubious honor of scandalizing both French and American audiences with
works that book end his career as an illustrious portraitist.
At the beginning of his career, as an advertisement of
his talents, he hung his now recognized masterpiece The portrait of Madame X in the 1884 Paris Salon. A portrait of the
American expatriate Paris socialite Virginie Amélie Avegno
Gautreau it was too sexy for the French. In the city that invented the Can Can,
the populace were
“shocked and scandalized” and Sargent prudently moved to London to establish
his career as the one percent’s favored portrait painter.
Thirty
five years later Sargent found himself entangled in another furor, this time for
his depiction of Judaism in a mural he painted for the Boston Library. Depicted
as an old hag in contrast to the beautiful Christian maiden it attracted fierce
criticism from the Jewish community. As Jenna Weissman Joselit wrote in her
essay Restoring
the ‘American Sistine Chapel,’ “It simmered for five long years,
embroiling politicians, journalists, art critics and poets as it ran its
course.”
Between these events Sargent
became the renowned portrait painter of his day
on both sides of the Atlantic with client’s paying up to $5,000
per portrait, or about $130,000 in current dollars.
Whilst Impressionism, Fauvism
and Cubism developed and expanded out from avant-garde art circles Sargent
maintained a realist style that caused the French sculptor Auguste Rodin to describe
him as “the Van Dyck of our times.”
But Sargent was not unmindful
of the modernist styles. As the novelist Henry James, a close confident of the
artist, remarked about Sargent’s work “the quality in light of which the artist
sees deep into his subject, undergoes it, absorbs it, becomes patient with it,
and almost reverent, and, in short, enlarges and humanizes the technical
problem.”
As well as his portraiture,
Sargent was a gifted watercolorist painting a wide variety of subjects ranging
from the English countryside to the canals of Venice. As his friend and
biographer Evan Charteris wrote in 1927
“To live with Sargent's watercolors is to live with sunshine
captured and held, with the luster of a bright and legible world, 'the refluent
shade' and 'the ambient ardors of the noon.”
Sargent was also commissioned
by the British Ministry of Information as a war artist during the First World War.
His painting Gassed which he completed in March of 1919 was voted best picture
of the year by the Royal Academy of Arts. A work
that Britain’s WWII Prime Minister, an amateur painter himself, praised for its
"brilliant genius and painful significance."
Although lauded for his
portraits by the rich and famous of his day in artistic terms he was consider a
relic of a gilded age. As the French artist Camille Pissarro wrote "he
is not an enthusiast but rather an adroit performer."
That has changed in recent
years with the re-awakening of interest in things Victorian in general and
Sargent’s almost impressionist paintings in particular. With New York’s Metropolitan
Museum of Art hosting the exhibition Sargent: Portraits
of Artists and Friends until the 4th of October.
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