WINNER of the W. E. Fischelis Award from the Victorian Society in
America.
Accompanying a major exhibition, this is the first book devoted to the
career of this renowned American painter through his brilliant
portraits. John Singer Sargent (1856-1925) was one of the leading
painters of his generation, whose captivating portraits are universally
admired for their insight into character, radiance of light and color,
and painterly fluency and immediacy. This unprecedented book showcases
Sargent's cosmopolitan career in a new light--through his bold portraits
of artists, writers, actors, and musicians, many of them his close
friends--giving us a picture of the artist as an intellectual and
connoisseur of the music, art, and literature of his day. Whether
depicted in well-appointed interiors or en plein air, the cast of
characters includes many famous subjects, among them Claude Monet,
Auguste Rodin, Gabriel Fauré, Vaslav Nijinsky, W. B. Yeats, Robert Louis
Stevenson, and Henry James. Structured thematically and according to the
places Sargent worked and lived--Paris, London, New York, Italy, and the
Alps--this book unites informative essays by noted scholars with a
wealth of imagery to offer fresh insights into Sargent's life and work.