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John Singer Sargent is most famous for his glamorous portraits of
eminent and socially prominent people of the Edwardian period. For a short while
after his death his popularity declined and he was criticized for being "superficially
brilliant", but today he is now recognized and acknowledged as a superb craftsman
of consummate skill. He was influenced in his style by Velazquez and Frans Hals,
and had a particular fondness for painting white and the play of light and shadow
on this colour. An expatriate American he was wildly popular in both England and
America, especially Boston where they practically lionized him, criss-crossing
the Atlantic on frequent trips to carry out commissions.
Born
in Florence, Italy, of well-to-do American
parents, the young Sargent was raised in the cultured milieu
of fashionable society, and led a nomadic life as he travelled with
his parents around the Continent. He received little formal education,
but his experiences and privileged background gave him a cosmopolitan
polish and his paintings reflect his astute observation of people,
places, and fashion. His mother, an accomplished musician and amateur
artist herself, encouraged him to pursue a career in art.
He began his formal art education at the École des Beaux-Arts,
and in the Paris studio of the French portraitist Carolus-Duran.
He moved in the Impressionist circles and got to know most of them,
became close friends with Monet, and experimented with the
Impressionist style in his later years. Sargent greatly admired
the work of Velazquez and in 1879 travelled to Spain to study his
work at first hand. Out of this trip and exposure to Spanish art
and culture came one of his greatest masterpieces, "El Jaleo".
It occupies a special niche of honour at the Isabella Stewart Gardner
Museum in Boston. Mrs Gardner, herself the subject of two Sargent
portraits, was a supporter and patron of the painter.
When his daring portrait of Madame X in 1884 (initially
the one strap of her gown was draped off her shoulder, which was
considered shocking and brazen by the standards of that time. He
subsequently painted the strap back in its proper place, but it
took a couple of years for him to win back his prestige)
scandalized the Paris Salon, he moved
to England, which remained his home base the rest of his life. Sargent
himself was very proud of this portrait and thought it one of his
finest works. In England the author Henry James befriended him and
championed his cause, and his influence and connections were instrumental
in restoring Sargent to public favour; and an eminence and prestige
he never again lost.
About 1907 Sargent tired of portrait
painting and accepted few commissions. He then worked chiefly on European scenes
in watercolor, in a notably impressionistic style. Reflecting the esteem in which
he was held on both sides of the Atlantic, Sargent received honorary degrees from
Cambridge and Oxford, as well as Harvard, Yale and Pennsylvania. He
died in London in 1925 of a heart-attack, aged sixty-nine. |