Reflections: Rocks and Water

  • Item #
  • 115401
  • Orientation
  • Landscape/Horizontal
Item:
1103 of 1186
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John Singer Sargent

1856-1925

John Singer Sargent (1856-1925) was an American artist, considered the "leading portrait painter of his generation." Born in Florence, Italy to American parents, Sargent studied painting in Italy and France before gaining renown for his portraits of the wealthy and aristocratic. His works are characterized by remarkable technical ability, a modern sensibility, and a deft command of light and color.

Sargent's most famous portraits include Madame X, Lady Agnew of Lochnaw, The Daughters of Edward Darley Boit, and his self-portrait. He also created large-scale murals, including a series depicting the history of religion for the Boston Public Library. Sargent was an acclaimed watercolorist and landscape painter as well. Despite controversy early in his career, he became one of the most celebrated and successful portrait artists of his era, elected to the Royal Academy at age 34.

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Other Paintings by John Singer Sargent

Violet Resting on the Grass
Subject: Women and Ladies
Wharf Scene also known as The Dock
Subject: Harbors and Ports
I Gesuati
Subject: Coastal Villages and Towns
Mrs. Frederick Roller
Subject: Women and Ladies
At Calcot
Subject: Rivers, Creeks, and Canals
A Group of Five Male Saints
Subject: Religious Figures
Breakfast in the Loggia
Subject: Women and Ladies
Palazzo Foscari
Subject: Coastal Villages and Towns
William Butler Yeats
Subject: Portraits
Miss Helen Dunham
Subject: Women and Ladies
A Horse and Two Oxen at a Ford
Subject: Cows and Cattle
The Sulphur Match
Subject: Men and Women