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John Singer Sargent (1856

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Title: John Singer Sargent (1856


1
John Singer Sargent(1856 1925)
  • Portrait of a Boy
  • c. 1890

2

3
John Singer Sargent
  • Before Sargent's birth, his father FitzWilliam
    was an eye surgeon at the Wills Eye Hospital in
    Philadelphia 1844-1854.
  • After John's older sister died at the age of two,
    his mother Mary (née Singer) suffered a
    breakdown, and the couple decided to go abroad to
    recover.

4
  • The Sargent family remained nomadic expatriates
    for the rest of their lives.
  • Though based in Paris, Sargent's parents moved
    regularly with the seasons to the sea and the
    mountain resorts in France, Germany, Italy, and
    Switzerland.

5
Sargents Birth
  • While Mary was pregnant, they stopped in
    Florence, Italy because of a cholera epidemic.
  • Sargent was born there in 1856. A year later, his
    sister Mary was born. After her birth,
    FitzWilliam reluctantly resigned his post in
    Philadelphia and accepted his wife's entreaties
    to remain abroad.

6
  • They lived modestly on a small inheritance and
    savings, living a quiet life with their children.
  • They generally avoided society and other
    Americans except for friends in the art world.
  • Four more children were born abroad, of whom only
    two lived past childhood.

7
  • Though his father was a patient teacher of basic
    subjects, young Sargent was a rambunctious child,
    more interested in outdoor activities than his
    studies.
  • As his father wrote home, "He is quite a close
    observer of animated nature."

8
  • His mother was quite convinced that traveling
    around Europe, and visiting museums and churches,
    would give young Sargent a satisfactory
    education.
  • Several attempts to have him formally schooled
    failed, owing mostly to their itinerant life.
  • Sargent's mother was a fine amateur artist and
    his father was a skilled medical illustrator.

9
  • Early on, his mother gave him sketchbooks and
    encouraged drawing excursions.
  • Young Sargent worked with care on his drawings,
    and he enthusiastically copied images from The
    Illustrated London News of ships and made
    detailed sketches of landscapes.
  • FitzWilliam had hoped that his son's interest in
    ships and the sea might lead him toward a naval
    career.

10
  • At thirteen, his mother reported that John
    "sketches quite nicely, has a remarkably quick
    and correct eye.
  • If we could afford to give him really good
    lessons, he would soon be quite a little artist.
  • At age thirteen, he received some watercolor
    lessons from Carl Welsch, a German landscape
    painter.

11
  • Though his education was far from complete,
    Sargent grew up to be a highly literate and
    cosmopolitan young man, accomplished in art,
    music, and literature.
  • He was fluent in French, Italian, and German.
  • At seventeen, Sargent was described as "willful,
    curious, determined and strong" (after his
    mother) yet shy, generous, and modest (after his
    father).
  • He was well-acquainted with many of the great
    masters from first hand observation, as he wrote
    in 1874, "I have learned in Venice to admire
    Tintoretto immensely and to consider him perhaps
    second only to Michelangelo and Titian."

12
Training
  • An attempt to study at the Academy of Florence
    failed as the school was re-organizing at the
    time, so after returning to Paris from Florence,
    Sargent began his art studies with Carolus-Duran.
  • The young French portrait artist, who had a
    meteoric rise, was noted for his bold technique
    and modern teaching methods, and his influence
    would be pivotal to Sargent during the period
    from 1874-1878

13
  • In 1874, on the first attempt, Sargent passed the
    rigorous exam required to gain admission to the
    École des Beaux-Arts, the premier art school in
    France.
  • He took drawing classes, which included anatomy
    and perspective, and gained a silver prize

14
  • He also spent much time in self-study, drawing in
    museums and painting in a studio he shared with
    James Carroll Beckwith.
  • He became both a valuable friend and Sargent's
    primary connection with the American artists
    abroad.
  • Sargent also took some lessons from Léon Bonnat

15
  • Sargent was the star student in short order.
  • It was noted in 1874 that Sargent was "one of the
    most talented fellows to ever come along his
    drawings are like the old masters, and his color
    is equally fine.
  • Sargent's excellent command of French and his
    superior talent made him both popular and
    admired.
  • Sargent would meet giants of the art world,
    including Degas, Rodin, Monet, and Whistler.

16
  • In December 1889, the expatriate artist John
    Singer Sargent, accompanied by his younger sister
    Violet, arrived from London at New York harbor.

17
Portraitist
  • Not yet thirty-four, Sargent was approaching the
    highpoint of his fame on both sides of the
    Atlantic as a portraitist.

18
  • His previous American visit, an eight-month trip
    undertaken in 18871888, had resulted in an
    enthusiastic reception, many new commissions, and
    the promise of future contacts in Boston,
    Newport, and New York.

19
Newport, Rhode Island

20

21
  • By the turn of the 20th century, many of the
    nation's wealthiest families were summering in
    Newport, including the Vanderbilts, Astors and
    Widener family who constructed the largest
    "cottages", such as The Breakers (1895) and
    Miramar.
  • Many of the homes were designed by the New York
    architect Richard Morris Hunt, who himself kept a
    house in Newport.

22
  • They came for a brief social season to grand,
    gilded mansions with elaborate receiving, dining,
    music and ballrooms, but with few bedrooms, since
    the guests were expected to have cottages of
    their own.

23
The Breakers

24
Chateau-sur-Mer

25
Belcourt castle
26
  • Newport was known for being the city of some of
    the "Summer White Houses" during the
    administrations of Presidents Dwight D.
    Eisenhower and John F. Kennedy.

27
  • Today, many mansions continue in private use.
  • Others, including Hammersmith Farm, the mansion
    from which Jackie Kennedy was married, are now
    open to tourists as house museums.

28

29
  • Still others were converted into academic
    buildings for Salve Regina College in the 1930s
    when the owners could no longer afford their tax
    bills.

30
  • Like Gilbert Stuart before him, (remember George
    Washingtons portrait that we studied) Sargent
    painted formal portraits for the Gilded Ages
    patrician class in the manner of European
    aristocratic portraiture.

31
  • He also brought with him a fresh, new way to
    depict a subject that was popular in both England
    and the United States ---
  • children
  • at a time when childhood was being singled out
    as a critical period in human development (and in
    national progress).

32
Historically this is a new concept..
  • Because now children were understood to be the
    direct link to the future, they warranted special
    attention.

33
  • From the widespread manufacturing of special
    books, toys, and clothing,
  • To child protection laws,
  • The later nineteenth century ushered in what a
    1907 article in Cosmopolitan magazine called the,
  • age of the child.

34
Child Protection Laws
  • Lets take a moment and discuss how children were
    a major work force in America at this time.
  • These were not the children of the Upper Class.

35
  • In the late 1700's and early 1800's, power-driven
    machines replaced hand labor for the making of
    most manufactured items.
  • Factories began to spring up everywhere, first in
    England and then in the United States.
  • The owners of these factories found a new source
    of labor to run their machines children.
  • Operating the power-driven machines did not
    require adult strength, and children could be
    hired more cheaply than adults.
  • By the mid-1800's, child labor was a major
    problem.

36
  • Children had always worked, especially in
    farming. But factory work was hard. A child with
    a factory job might work 12 to 18 hours a day,
    six days a week, to earn a dollar.
  • Many children began working before the age of 7,
    tending machines in spinning mills or hauling
    heavy loads.
  • The factories were often damp, dark, and dirty.
    Some children worked underground, in coal mines.
    The working children had no time to play or go to
    school, and little time to rest. They often
    became ill.

37
The Mill Some boys and girls were so small they
had to climb up on to the spinning frame to mend
broken threads and to put back the empty bobbins.
Bibb Mill No. 1. Macon, Georgia.

38
Newsies Out after midnight selling extras. There
were many young boys selling very late. Youngest
boy in the group is 9 years old. Harry, age 11,
Eugene and the rest were a little older.
Washington, D.C.

39
Miners View of the Ewen Breaker of the
Pennsylvania Coal Co. The dust was so dense at
times as to obscure the view. This dust
penetrated the utmost recesses of the boys'
lungs. A kind of slave-driver sometimes stands
over the boys, prodding or kicking them into
obedience. South Pittston, Pennsylvania.

40
The Mill One of the spinners in Whitnel Cotton
Mill. She was 51 inches high. Has been in the
mill one year. Sometimes works at night. Runs 4
sides - 48 cents a day. When asked how old she
was, she hesitated, then said, "I don't
remember," then added confidentially, "I'm not
old enough to work, but do just the same." Out of
50 employees, there were ten children about her
size. Whitnel, North Carolina.

41
For the Rich and Privileged
  • Children of these families were viewed entirely
    differently. They were members of families with
    power and prestige.
  • However, the economic source of power and
    prestige is not just based on income primarily,
    but the ownership of capital goods (including
    patents, good will, and professional reputation).
  • Such ownership should be distinguished from the
    possession of consumers' goods, which is an index
    rather than a cause of social standing.

42
  • The wealth of the period is highlighted by the
    American upper class' opulence, but also by the
    rise of American philanthropy (referred to by
    Andrew Carnegie as the "Gospel of Wealth") that
    used private money to endow thousands of
    colleges, hospitals, museums, academies, schools,
    opera houses, public libraries, symphony
    orchestras, and charities.

43
  • Understanding American society at that time will
    help you to appreciate the clientele of Sargent.

44
John Singer Sargent ..
  • Dismissing his contemporaries sentimental
    approach to childhood as a period of lost
    innocence, Sargent approached his youthful
    sitters directly, painting them naturalistically
    and with a keen, psychologically penetrating eye.

45
  • His many portraits of the young heirs of
    Americas upper class also helped to further the
    artists career, pleasing conservative critics
    and reassuring future patrons who might harbor
    some lingering doubts as to whether they wanted
    to submit themselves to Sargents forceful
    brushwork and bravura technique.

46
  • Sargents portrait of the young Homer
    Saint-Gaudens, the son of the sculptor Augustus
    Saint-Gaudens (Robert Shaw Memorial), and his
    mother Augusta, a cousin of Winslow Homer (The
    Veteran in a New Field), is an intimate portrait
    for a friend, not a commission that paid the
    bills.

47
  • Sargent first encountered Saint-Gaudens in Paris
    in 1878.
  • When the artists met again in New York in 1890,
    Saint-Gaudens expressed interest in sculpting an
    image of Sargents sister Violet and the painting
    was done in the spirit of an exchange.

48
  • Nonetheless, the fact that Sargent preferred a
    generic title, Portrait of a Boy, to the specific
    name of the child, and excluded his mothers name
    entirely may indicate the artists desire to
    elevate his depiction of Homer Saint-Gaudens to a
    universal statement about the nature of boys (or
    perhaps just American ones).

49

50
  • In Portrait of a Boy, ten-year-old Homer
    confronts the artist and viewer head-on and eye
    to eye with a bored, yet penetrating glance,
    while behind him, and painted in a more summary
    manner, Augusta is absorbed in reading.

51
Lets take a closer look.
  • The difference between the two poses.
  • What does their body language say about how each
    sitter probably felt about posing for this
    picture?

52

53
  • Homer is dressed (uncomfortably, it appears) in a
    Little Lord Fauntleroy suit, an outfit based on
    the title character from Frances Hodgson
    Burnetts wildly popular, serialized story of
    Cedric, an American boy who, through Yankee
    ingenuity and the wisdom imparted by his mother,
    was able to lay claim to his aristocratic English
    heritage.

54
Yankee Ingenuity
  • Yankee ingenuity is an American English reference
    to the self-reliance of early colonial settlers
    of New England, United States.
  • It describes an attitude of make-do with
    materials on hand. It is inventive improvisation,
    adaptation and overcoming of dire straits when
    faced with a dearth of materials.

55
  • Thomas
  • Gainsboroughs
  • "fancy picture"
  • The Blue Boy

56
  • Cedrics costume, derived from the attire worn by
    Thomas Gainsboroughs Blue Boy of c.1770, was so
    popular with mothers that, by the turn of the
    century, wearing it became synonymous with being
    a mamas boy.

57
  • Homer is dressed in an outfit based on a story
    that was extremely popular with mothers.
  • This costume was also beginning to be associated
    with being a mammas boy.
  • Do you think Homer is portrayed as a mammas
    boy and to point out why or why not?

58
  • How would you pose under similar circumstances?

59

60
  • Homer, wearing his fancy suit, does not appear to
    be the obedient child listening to his mothers
    every word.

61
  • We know from Homers adult recollections of these
    sittings that his mother, Augusta was vainly
    attempting to entertain her son with the story of
    a naval battle from the War of 1812.

62
  • Sargent expressed the boys impatience and
    nervous energy not only through his pose but also
    through the structure of the composition.

63
Take a closer look
  • The child slumps sideways in the ornate studio
    chair.

64

65
  • And while his right foot turns languidly inward,
    his left foot is braced against the rung, ready
    to spring.

66
  • The latent energy of his spread, bent fingers
    matches the complexity of the swirling pattern of
    the red carpet, and this unease is intensified by
    Homers pose, which is at a slight angle to both
    the viewer and to his mother.

67

68
  • How has Sargent used the room and accessories in
    this painting to intensify Homers feeling of
    impatience?

69
  • Who is more important in this double portrait?
  • How can you tell?

70
  • How did the artist emphasize Homers importance?

71
Answer
  • Sargent has positioned Homer in the foreground at
    the center of the painting.
  • The boy sprawls across a large, ornate chair and
    looks directly at the viewer (or painter).
  • There is a strong light shining on his face,
    hands, and bowtie, and he is painted in more
    detail than his mother is.
  • His importance is also reflected in the title,
    Portrait of a Boy.

72
  • As with Sargents more ambitious pictures, the
    portrait of Homer and his mother was conceived
    with an eye to enriching the painters reputation.

73
  • Critics were quick to praise the immediacy of the
    subject
  • The exquisite truth of its pose and the rare
    vitality of every line of the body, not less than
    the beautiful face itself reveal the power of a
    master.

74
  • The painting won a gold medal at the Art Club of
    Philadelphia the year it was painted.

75
  • Portrait of a Boy was one of the works Sargent
    chose to exhibit at the Chicago Worlds Fair in
    1893.

76
John Singer Sargent

77
"The Daughters of Edward Darley Boit", (1882),

78
Paul Helleu Sketching with his Wife,1889

79
  • Fredrick
  • Law
  • Olmstead

80
  • Lady Agnew's direct gaze and informal pose,
    emphasized by the flowing fabric and lilac sash
    of her dress ensure the portrait's striking
    impact.
  • Andrew Noel Agnew, a barrister who had inherited
    the baronetcy and estates of Lochnaw in Galloway,
    commissioned this painting of his young wife,
    Gertrude Vernon (1865-1932), in 1892.
  • It was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1898 and
    made Sargent's name.
  • The sculptor Rodin described him as 'the Van Dyck
    of our times'. Portrait commissions poured in and
    Sargent enjoyed something of a cult following in
    Edwardian society. It also launched Lady Agnew as
    a society beauty.

81

82
Alice Vanderbilt Shepard, age 13

83
  • Margaret Louisa
  • Vanderbilt

84
Robert Louis Stevenson and His wife
85
Robert Louis Stevenson

86
Morning Walk

87
  • "In Roosevelt's official presidential portrait
    Sargent seized upon two of the President's most
    salient characteristics, physical vitality and a
    self-assurance bordering on arrogance, and he
    painted a tour de force of nuanced blacks, grays,
    browns, and creams. . . .
  • "The famous expatriate artist arrived in America
    in January 1903 and soon received a letter from
    Roosevelt inviting him to live in the White House
    during the month of February to work on the
    portrait. . . .

88
  • "Together Sargent and Roosevelt toured the
    White House while Sargent looked for proper light
    and a good pose. . . . As Roosevelt led the way
    upstairs, so the story goes, he said, 'The
    trouble with you Sargent, is that you don't know
    what you want.
  • 'No,' replied the artist, "the trouble, Mr.
    President, is that you don't know what a pose
    means.' Roosevelt turned sharply back, grasped
    the newel-post and snapped, 'Don't I!' 'Don't
    move an inch. You've got it now,' responded
    Sargent. . . . .
  • "Sargent formalized the pose as an official
    portrait demands, but the highly colored face and
    hand bring the painting to vivid life. . . . The
    expression--a near scowl with narrowed eyes
    focused on the view--and the vigorously modeled
    head compel attention and respect."

89

90
Sitwell Family From left Edith Sitwell
(1887-1964), Sir George Sitwell, Lady Ida,
Sacheverell Sitwell (1897-1988), and Osbert
Sitwell (1892-1969)

91
  • His most controversial work, Portrait of Madame X
    (Madame Pierre Gautreau) (1884) is now considered
    one of his best works, and was the artist's
    personal favorite.
  • Sargent stated in 1915, "I suppose it is the best
    thing I have done."

92
Madam X
  • When the portrait was unveiled in Paris at the
    1884 Salon, it aroused such a negative reaction
    that it likely prompted Sargent's move to London.
  • Sargent's self-confidence had led him to attempt
    another risky experiment in portraiturebut this
    time it unexpectedly back-fired.
  • The painting was not commissioned by Madame
    Pierre Gautreau and Sargent pursued her for the
    opportunity, quite unlike most of his portrait
    work where clients sought him out.

93
  • Sargent wrote to a mutual acquaintance
  • "I have a great desire to paint her portrait and
    have reason to think she would allow it and is
    waiting for someone to propose this homage to her
    beauty. ...you might tell her that I am a man of
    prodigious talent."

94
  • It took well over a year to complete the
    painting.The first version of the portrait of
    Madame Gautreau, with the famously plunging
    neckline, white-powdered skin, and arrogantly
    cocked head, featured an off-the-shoulder dress
    strap which made the overall effect more daring
    and sensual.

95
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96
  • Sargent changed the strap to try to dampen the
    furor, but the damage had been done.
  • French commissions dried up and he told his
    friend Edmund Gosse in 1885 that he contemplated
    giving up painting for music or business.

97
  • Madame X
  • Madame Pierre
  • Gautreau, 1884

98
Claude Monet Painting by the Edge of a Wood, 1885

99
  • John D
  • Rockefeller
  • c. 1917

100
Essay Question 1
  • Homer is dressed in an outfit based on a story
    that was extremely popular with mothers.
  • This costume was also beginning to be associated
    with being a mammas boy.
  • Do you think Homer is portrayed as a mammas
    boy and to point out why or why not?

101
Essay Question 2
  • How has Sargent used the room and accessories in
    this painting to intensify Homers feeling of
    impatience?

102
Essay Question 3
  • How did the artist emphasize Homers importance?

103
Essay Question 4
  • Sargent made his living painting portraits of
    wealthy Americans and Europeans.
  • How do you think this work, done for a friend,
    might have differed if it had been commissioned
    by a wealthy family who wanted to hang it in a
    prominent place in
  • their home?

104
Essay Question 5
  • Sargent was praised for his truthful portrayal
    of children at a time when childhood was becoming
    an important focus in Europe and America.
  • Pretend you are an art critic and explain what
    you consider to be truthful about Homer
    Saint-Gaudens in this work.
  • Study closely the figures in this painting.

105
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