S is for spending the summer with John Singer Sargent

Oh my goodness, I have been delinquent!  Sorry, let me get back —pronto— to the reverse alphabet of art. Last post was for the letter T and now I’m ready to move on to the letter S.  Andiamo!

Wouldn’t you love to be passing a summer afternoon with these ladies?  I would!  I bet they are discussing their beaus.

Or, taking a summer afternoon nap to escape the heat in this little outbuilding in Corfu?  I would!

Or, gliding in a gondola over the waterways of Venice?  I would!

Or, observing some exotic ceremony in some Middle Eastern country?  I would!

Or, playing some board game with your friends on some pretty bank of some lovely, cooling stream?  I would!  But I do wonder why all the women have their heads wrapped up in filmy cloth.  Too many insects, I presume.

Mosquito Nets by John Singer Sargent

One activity from which I prefer to be excused, is reading while under mosquito netting.  But, who wouldn’t like to look at the beautifully-painted image?  I would!

Or, painting a portrait of a gorgeous gentleman while sitting on classical balustrade next to a waterfall? I mean come on!  I would!

Or standing over water pouring out of a jet and into a pool, while dressed in your most elaborate summer whites. While pausing on a classical balustrade, next to some potted lemon trees in some magnificent Italian locale?  I would!

What child wouldn’t like to spend the evening hours, after the heat of the day has passed, dressed in your coolest cotton clothing, capturing fire flies in a flower garden?  I would!

Or fishing on the side of a cool stream with your feet in the water?  I would!

Or, preparing to dine on an outdoor terrace?  I would!

Or, best of all, who wouldn’t love to lie on the ground, sunk into your voluminous and gorgeous summer fashions and being painted all the while by one of the best painters of all time?  I would!

Who wouldn’t want to spend a summer with John Singer Sargent?

Keep cool, everybody! Arrividerla!

American Art: John Singer Sargent

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The next painter in my blog series on “American art” is John Singer Sargent.

Wow.  What a painter.  He could handle paint and create compositions as well as any artist from any country from any time period since oil paint was developed c. 1450.

Now that’s a big statement and I know it.  I am going to illustrate his mastery  with more of his work below.

For starters, allow your eye to get lost in the facile handling of pigment with long stokes of the brush in this detail:

Keeping in mind that this work is actually just a collection of colors on a flat canvas, you start to understand his mastery.

After you have studied the detail, you want to go back to the whole composition, so here it is:

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Wouldn’t you love to talk to this woman and find out:  what time of day is it and is she ready to go out or has she just returned home?  Is she tired, is she bored, has she been jilted, has she jilted someone else?  These would just be my starting questions.

Her long, flowing hair let down around her shoulders may be a clue.  I’d assume that if she were about to go out her hair would be up.  Just a guess, though.

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For drama, you cannot top Sargent.  Check out the controlled energy in the figure of this gorgeous dancer and the intense concentration of her accompanying musicians.

So yes, he could paint exotic subject matter.  But he could also create unforgettable images of home life.  I love the title of this work, Carnation, Lily, Lily, Rose, almost as much as I love the painting itself.

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This stunning portrait, which today is known as Madame X and is in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, created a big stir.  In the woman’s hauteur and her nonchalant exposure of bare flesh, the painting was very unorthodox.

Here’s a great photograph of Sargent in his studio with the painting.

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And, although Sargent knocks me out with his oil paintings, I doubt very much that there has ever been a watercolorist who could top his handling of this unforgiving medium.  It doesn’t hurt that his subject matter in watercolor is often street or water scenes of Venice.

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So, back to the same old question:  what is American about American art?  The answer becomes increasingly irrelevant as the physical world became much smaller–as travel and communications expanded– in the late 19th-century.  Sargent, like Cassatt and Whistler in discussed in earlier posts, was born in the United States and had many patrons here.  Other than that, he was a cosmopolitan man of the world, and painting among the best of them.

Ciao for today.