Right: Madame X, 1884
In an earlier post, I wrote about the contrasting images of the American painter Winslow Homer. I said:
It is hard to imagine that Winslow Homer paints pristine portraits of society women when I see his Northeaster. It is similar with his contemporary John Singer Sargent, about whom I will be posting in my next blog.Below are the Sargent's interiors, exteriors, and cultivated ladies. His exotica came from numerous places, included from his travels to the Middle East and the Mediterranean.
I think that truly artistic painters can tackle any landscape, or any portrait. Their genius lies not just in depicting these views, but also in infusing their own "vision" in the paintings. Sargent and Homer did that.
Right: Capri Girl, 1878