Transcriber’s Note:
The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.
John Singer Sargent
RETROSPECTIVE EXHIBITION OF IMPORTANT WORKS
of
John Singer Sargent
FEBRUARY 23RD
to
MARCH 22ND
1924
❦
GRAND CENTRAL ART GALLERIES
GRAND CENTRAL TERMINAL
[TAXICAB ENTRANCE]
15 VANDERBILT AVENUE NEW YORK CITY
Copyright 1924 by Painters and Sculptors Gallery Association, Inc. All rights reserved for all countries. :: Printed in the United States of America. :: :: Photographs by Peter A. Juley & Son
GRAND CENTRAL ART GALLERIES
15 Vanderbilt Avenue
New York City
TRUSTEES
John G. Agar
Walter L. Clark
William A. Delano
Irving T. Bush
Robert W. DeForest
Walter S. Gifford
Frank G. Logan
OFFICERS
| President | Walter L. Clark |
| Vice President | Robert W. DeForest |
| Secretary and Treasurer | Walter S. Gifford |
FOREWORD
The Painters and Sculptors Association is a non-profit-bearing organization established solely to further interest in American Art, and to increase the sales of the work of the living American Painter and Sculptor. The Association is one of contributing artist members and subscribing lay-members, numbering about one hundred and fifty each. This membership is not local; the artists are from various regions extending from coast to coast, while the lay-group is composed of those interested in Art in all of the larger cities of the United States, and including Presidents and Vice-Presidents of ten of the great Museums, together with many officers and directors of these Institutions. There are representatives from New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Brooklyn, Rochester, Buffalo, Washington, D. C., Baltimore, Norfolk, Atlanta, Montclair, Newark, Cleveland, Canton, Dayton, Akron, Aurora, Chicago, Moline, Rockford, Joliet, Detroit, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, St. Louis, Kansas City, Denver, Los Angeles and San Francisco. This makes of the Painters and Sculptors Association a national organization in its extent and far-reaching in its interest. This makes it a clearing house and not merely a local sales place.
According to the plan of the organization of the Painters and Sculptors Association, each of the lay-members has pledged an annual subscription of six-hundred dollars for three years, thus providing for that period a subsidy. Each of the artist members presents to the association, as his membership fee, one of his works a year, for three years, this period having been agreed upon as a proper duration to test the practicability of the plan. At the end of the year each of the lay-members has the privilege of receiving one of the works of the Artist members.
Delano and Aldrich, architects, have designed and planned the Galleries, numbering at present fourteen. The galleries as they are now open to the public constitute the largest and handsomest salesrooms in either Europe or America, and there is no other place where the work of so many American artists can be seen or where the exhibit can constantly rotate and yet maintain its high standard of excellence. In the eleven months during which they have operated they have been visited by over 110,000 people. In this time it has been demonstrated conclusively that a sales place may partake of the excellence of standard, the beauty of installation, the atmosphere, the character, and the dignity of a modern museum and yet impart quite another form of message. Ownership, and the joy of possession, are the elements in the psychology of the Painters and Sculptors Association.
The Association is under the direction of seven men who are nationally known as business executives, and who contribute their time and experience absolutely without remuneration.
The sales during the past months have been most encouraging. A number of portrait commissions have been placed, while important paintings and bronzes were installed in leading museums.
The First Annual Exhibition, and several of the series of one-man exhibitions have been given and will be followed by more. Several out-of-town exhibitions have been held, when the number of sales was most flattering. Pictures were assembled and shipped from this gallery to Rome. Assistance was rendered the National Academy of Design, the Corcoran Biennial, and the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, The Art Institute of Chicago, and The Carnegie Institute at Pittsburgh in their exhibitions this season.
LAY MEMBERS
NEW YORK CITY
Mr. John G. Agar
Mr. Bartlett Arkell
Mrs. Harry Payne Bingham
Mr. John Mc E. Bowman
Mr. Irving T. Bush
Mr. Gale Carter
Mrs. Joseph H. Choate
Miss Mabel Choate
Mr. Walter L. Clark
Mr. Wm. H. Clarke
Mrs. Otto Kahn
Mr. L. A. Osborne
Mr. George Foster Peabody
Mrs. Willard Straight
Mr. H. B. Thayer
Mr. Hector W. Thomas
Mr. Louis C. Tiffany
Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt
Mr. Felix Warburg
Mr. Paul Warburg
Mr. E. E. Bartlett
Mr. L. M. Boomer
Mrs. Clarkson Cowl
Mr. William A. Delano
Engineer’s Club
Mr. Victor Guinzburg
Mr. Henry W. Cannon
Mr. William H. Davis
Mr. Robert W. DeForest
Mr. Daniel Chester French
Mr. Henry J. Fuller
Mr. Walter S. Gifford
Mr. Joseph P. Grace
Mr. John R. Gregg
Mrs. E. H. Harriman
Mr. August Heckscher
Mr. Archer M. Huntington
CHICAGO, ILL.
Mr. Albert Brunker
Mr. Edward B. Butler
Mr. R. T. Crane, Jr.
Mr. Bernard A. Eckhart
Mr. Percy B. Eckhart
Mr. William O. Goodman
Mr. E. T. Gundlach
Mr. Charles L. Hutchinson
Mrs. John E. Jenkins
Mr. William V. Kelley
Mr. R. P. Lamont
Mr. Frank G. Logan
Mr. Potter Palmer
Mr. Julius Rosenwald
Mr. Martin A. Ryerson
Mr. E. F. Selz
Mr. B. E. Sunny
Mr. Harold H. Swift
Mr. L. L. Valentine
Mr. Charles H. Worcester
Mr. Charles A. Munroe
BOSTON, MASS.
General Butler Ames
Mrs. Oakes Ames
Dr. Richard C. Cabot
Mr. William A. Gaston
Mr. John Singer Sargent
Mr. Edward C. Storrow
NEWARK, N. J.
Mr. Joseph S. Isidor
Mr. Louis Bamberger
MONTCLAIR, N. J.
Mrs. Henry Lang
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Mr. Morris R. Bockius
Mrs. Charles Heber Clark
Mr. W. M. Elkins
Mr. William P. Gest
Mr. Samuel Rea
Mrs. Edward T. Stotesbury
HAZELTON, PA.
Mr. Alvan Markle, Jr.
ST. LOUIS, MO.
Mr. William K. Bixby
Mr. Edward A. Faust
Mr. Edward Mallinckrodt
Mr. Wallace D. Simmons
AURORA, ILLINOIS
Mr. Frederick G. Adamson
Mr. James M. Cowan
Captain J. F. Harral
Mr. David B. Piersen
Mr. Albert M. Snook
Mr. Wiley W. Stephens
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Mr. Charles C. Glover
Mr. James E. Parmelee
NASHVILLE, TENN.
Major E. B. Stahlman
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
Mrs. John N. Carey
Friends of American Art
Miss Lucy M. Taggart
Mrs. Thomas Taggart
Mrs. H. B. Burnet
ROCKFORD, ILLINOIS
Mrs. William Hinchliff
Mrs. D. M. Keith
Mrs. George D. Roper
Dr. Louis A. Shultz
AKRON, OHIO
Mr. Edwin C. Shaw
MILLBROOK, N. Y.
Mrs. Walter S. Beck
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.
Mr. E. L. Carpenter
Mr. John R. VanDerlip
JOLIET, ILLINOIS
Mr. Theodore Gerlach
BUFFALO, N. Y.
Mr. Charles Clifton
KEWANEE, ILLINOIS
Mr. W. H. Lyman
KANSAS CITY, MO.
Mr. Albert R. Jones
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA
Mrs. William Sloane
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA
Mr. Paul R. Mabury
DUBUQUE, IOWA
Mr. W. H. Klauer
PITTSBURGH, PA.
Miss Helen C. Frick
Mr. Howard Heinz
CLEVELAND, OHIO
Mr. Salmon P. Halle
Mr. Samuel Mather
Mr. J. H. Wade
DETROIT, MICHIGAN
Mr. Edsel B. Ford
Mr. Richard H. Webber
ROCHESTER, N. Y.
Mr. George Eastman
MILWAUKEE, WISC.
Mr. Ernest Copeland
Mr. William H. Schuchardt
Mr. Walter W. Lange
DAYTON, OHIO
Mr. J. B. Hayward
BALTIMORE, MD.
Mr. Van Lear Black
DULUTH, MINN.
Mr. George P. Tweed
CANTON, OHIO
Mr. Wendell Herbruck
Mr. William S. Kinney
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
Mr. J. J. Haverty
DENVER, COLORADO
Mrs. Junius Flagg Brown
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF.
Mr. Templeton Crocker
MOLINE, ILLINOIS
Mrs. Burton F. Peek
ST. PAUL, MINN.
Mr. Louis W. Hill
TOLEDO, OHIO
Mr. Edward Drummond Libbey
STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN
Honorable Robert Woods Bliss
BROOKLYN, N. Y.
Mr. John Hill Morgan
WHIDBY ISLAND, WASHINGTON
Mr. Frank J. Pratt, Jr.
PAINTER MEMBERS
Mr. John Singer Sargent
Mr. Charles W. Hawthorne
Mr. Frederick Ballard Williams
Mr. Chauncey F. Ryder
Mr. Frank W. Benson
Mr. Edwin Blashfield
Mr. W. Elmer Schofield
Mr. Oliver Dennett Grover
Mr. Edmund Greacen
Miss Helen Turner
Mr. Gardner Symons
Mr. Ezra Winter
Mr. Irving R. Wiles
Mr. John C. Johansen
M. Jean McLane
Mr. Daniel Garber
Mr. R. Sloan Bredin
Mr. Elliott Daingerfield
Miss Felicie Waldo Howell
Mr. Ernest Ipsen
Mr. Murray P. Bewley
Mr. Francis C. Jones
Mr. Harry Watrous
Mr. George Elmer Browne
Mr. Edward H. Potthast
Mr. Albert Groll
Mr. Frederick J. Waugh
Mr. Ralph Clarkson
Mr. Leopold Seyffert
Mr. John Sloan
Miss Cecilia Beaux
Mr. Roy Brown
Mr. E. Irving Couse
Miss Lillian Genth
Mr. Douglas Volk
Mr. G. Glenn Newell
Mr. Charles Warren Eaton
Mr. Harry A. Vincent
Mr. Victor Higgins
Mr. Leon Gaspard
Mr. Wilson Irvine
Mr. Charles H. Woodbury
Mr. George H. Hallowell
Mr. Birge Harrison
Mr. H. Dudley Murphy
Mr. Karl Anderson
Mr. Leslie P. Thompson
Mr. Charles Hopkinson
Mr. Philip L. Hale
Mrs. Lilian Westcott Hale
Mr. Cullen Yates
Mr. Ernest L. Blumenschein
Mr. Guy Wiggins
Mr. William Wendt
Mr. Ivan G. Olinsky
Mr. Henry W. Parton
Mr. Robert W. Chanler
Mr. Walter Ufer
Mr. Edward C. Volkert
Mr. Hobart Nichols
Mr. Alson Skinner Clark
Mr. Max Bohm (deceased)
Mr. Henry R. Rittenberg
Mr. Eugene F. Savage
Mr. John Noble
Miss Anna Fisher
Mr. John R. Folinsbee
Mr. Karl A. Buehr
Mr. Van Dearing Perrine
Mr. William Baxter Closson
Mr. Albert Sterner
Mr. Charles H. Davis
Mr. Paul Dougherty
Mr. Ben Foster
Mr. Charles S. Chapman
Mr. Louis Ritman
Mr. Putnam Brinley
Mr. Charles Morris Young
Mr. Wayman Adams
Mr. John F. Carlson
Mr. Henry B. Snell
Mr. Hugh Breckenridge
Mr. Paul King
Mr. Henry O. Tanner
Mr. Horatio Walker
Mr. Louis C. Tiffany
Mr. Joseph Pennell
Mr. F. C. Frieseke
Mr. Frederic M. Grant
Mr. Carl Krafft
Mr. Francis Newton
Mr. Julius Rolshoven
Miss Pauline Palmer
Mr. John Costigan
Mr. Clark Voohrees
Mr. H. Bolton Jones
Miss Gertrude Fiske
Mr. Maurice Fromkes
Mr. Percival Rosseau
Mr. F. Luis Mora
Mr. Leonard Ochtman
Miss Dorothy Ochtman
Mr. Arthur Crisp
Mr. Richard E. Miller
Mr. Paul M. Gustin
Mr. James R. Hopkins
Mr. Edward W. Redfield
Mr. Randall Davey
Mr. Ettore Caser
Mr. Nicolai Fechin
Mrs. James W. Hailman
Mr. A. H. Gorson
Mr. Eugene Higgins
Mr. Ossip Linde
Mr. Robert Reid
SCULPTOR MEMBERS
Mr. Herbert Adams
Mr. Robert Aitken
Mr. Daniel Chester French
Mrs. Anna Hyatt Huntington
Miss Malvina Hoffman
Mr. Chester Beach
Mr. Frederick MacMonnies
Mrs. Evelyn B. Longman Batchelder
Mr. James E. Fraser
Mr. Lorado Taft
Mr. Sherry Fry
Mr. Edward McCartan
Mr. Cyrus E. Dallin
Mrs. Bessie Potter Vonnoh
Mr. Attilio Piccirilli
Miss Janet Scudder
Mrs. Laura Gardin Fraser
Mr. Albin Polasek
Miss Harriet W. Frishmuth
Mr. Mario Korbel
Mr. Mahonri Young
Mr. John Gregory
Mr. Victor Salvatore
Miss Renee Prahar
Mr. Gutzon Borglum
Mr. Paul Jennewein
Mr. R. Tait McKenzie
Mr. Edward Berge
Mrs. Lucy Perkins Ripley
Mrs. Anna Coleman Ladd
Mr. A. Phimister Proctor
Mr. Arthur Putnam
Mr. Henry K. Bush-Brown
Mrs. Edith Barretto Parsons
Mrs. Margaret French Cresson
Miss Grace Mott Johnson
An Appreciation
An Exhibition of the works of Mr. John Sargent is the most important event of the kind that could at this moment happen anywhere, as he is the foremost living painter in the world. So far as one can judge the work of a contemporary, one is justified in predicting immortality for these compositions. Sargent belongs among the great portrait painters of all time, his pictures revealing the mysterious but unmistakable stamp of genius. In fact, everything he does shows this quality, which makes his painting the envy of competitors, and the pride and glory of American art. He has no successful living rival, but is in a class by himself. So true is this, that if I were asked to name the greatest living American, I should unhesitatingly name John Singer Sargent.
This Exhibition is for the benefit of the Endowment Fund of the Painters and Sculptors Gallery Association, with which Mr. Sargent has from the beginning been in active cooperation.
William Lyon Phelps
“Masters of American Paintings”
Charles Caffin
Courtesy of Doubleday Page & Company, 1902
“John Singer Sargent has been a favored child of the Muses, and early reached a maturity for which others have to labour long and in the face of disappointments. He, however, has never had anything to unlearn. From the first he came under the influence of taste and style, the qualities which to this day distinguish his work.... With a facility that was partly a natural gift, partly the result of a steady acceptance of the problems presented, he proceeded to absorb his master—Carolus-Duran. Sargent absorbed his breadth of picturesque style, his refined pictorial sense, his sound and scientific method, not devoid of certain tricks of illusion and his piquant and persuasive modernity.... Later, Sargent visited Madrid, and came under the direct spell of Velasquez. The grand line he had learned while a boy, and from Carolus the seeing of colour as coloured light, the modelling in planes, the mysteries of sharp and vanishing outlines appearing and reappearing under the natural action of light, a realism of observation at once brilliant and refined, large and penetrating. Finally, from all these influences, Sargent has fashioned a method of his own.
“How shall one describe the method? It reveals the alertness and versatility of the American temperament. Nothing escapes his observation, up to a certain point at least; he is never tired of a fresh experiment; never repeats his compositions and schemes of colour, nor shows perfunctoriness or weariness of brush. In all his work there is a vivid meaningfulness; in his portraits, especially, an amazing suggestion of actuality. On the other hand, his virtuosity is largely French, reaching a perfection of assurance that the quick witted American is, for the most part, in too great a hurry to acquire; a patient perfection, not reliant upon mere impression or force of temperament. In the abounding resourcefulness of his method there is a mingling of audacity and conscientiousness; a facility so complete that the acts of perception and of execution seem identical, and an honesty that does not shrink from admitting that such and such a point was unattainable by him, or that to have obtained it would have disturbed the balance of the whole. Yet, this virtuosity, though it is French in character, is free of the French manner, as indeed of any mannerism. This skill of hand is at the service of a brilliant pictorial sense. Like a true painter, he sees a picture in everything he studies. It gives to each of his canvases a distinct aesthetic charm; grandiose in some, ravishingly elegant in others, delicately quaint in a few, but all of them variously characterized by grandeur of line, suppleness of arrangement, and fascinating surprise of detail; used with extraordinary originality, but always conformable to an instinctive sense of balance and rhythm.
“Sargent is not of the world in which he plays so conspicuous a part, but preserves an aloofness from it and studies it with the collectedness of an onlooker interested in the moving show and in its general trends of motive, but with an individual sympathy only occasionally elicited. Sargent has his grip upon the actual, and while in relation to the world and people about him he is almost a recluse, he has delighted his imagination with the seemings and shows of things and with their material significance.”
Modern Artists
Christian Brinton
Courtesy of Doubleday Page & Company—The Sun, 1908
“Beyond all question Sargent is the most conspicuous of living portrait painters. Before his eyes pass in continuous procession the world of art, science, and letters, the world financial, diplomatic, or military, and the world frankly social. To-day comes a savant, a captain of industry, or a slender, troubled child. Tomorrow it will be an insinuating Semetic Plutus; next week may bring some fresh-tinted Diana, radiant with vernal bloom. Everyone from poet to general, from duchess to dark-eyed dancer, finds place in this shifting throng....
“With the entrance of Sargent into the arena of art cherished conventions disappear in sorry discomfiture. With a dignity and a technical mastery which compel both respect and enthusiasm he tramples upon tradition whenever tradition stands in his way. It is useless to scan these canvases in the hope of finding various qualities which for centuries have been deemed the touchstone of portraiture. Contemplation and reflection are by no means the rule. That adjustment of diverse elements which makes for balanced composition is often lacking. That endearing love of tone for its own sake is frequently absent. The vigorous outline of Holbein, the rich sobriety of Titian, or the permeating magic of Leonardo find but faint echo in the work of this modern innovator. With almost disdainful independence he has declined to repeat the triumphs of the great forerunners. In place of their ideals he has substituted ideals which are resolutely his own. However you may regard his contribution, it is impossible not to recognize its insistent novelty. Once in possession of the underlying facts, there should be no trouble in reading aright the salient, positive art, this art which by turns persuades and repels. Yet one cannot divine just why these high-bred women are so animated, or why the soldiers and statesmen are so emphatic, without first peering beneath the exterior. Though Sargent may himself remain dexterously on the surface, the spectator cannot. It is not enough to watch this conjurer perform his trick; we must see how it is accomplished.
“So dazzled has the majority been by what is called the man’s cosmopolitanism that the real racial basis of his nature has been over-looked.... Sargent is American in his fundamental instincts. His adaptability and his very lack of marked bias bespeak the native complexity of his origin. It cannot for a moment be maintained that the French paint themselves as Sargent paints them, or the English either. His art is neither Gallic nor British, it is American, and the chief reason why it is so different from most Anglo-Saxon art is because it is so superior, not because it is unAmerican. In any case the sense of motion remains Sargent’s personal conquest, possibly, even, his chief contribution to portraiture.
“In Sargent’s portraits women are in the act of starting from their chairs and men are on the very point of speaking. Here is a dancer whose yellow skirt still swirls in elastic convolutions; there stands a painter lunging at the canvas with sensitively poised brush. All is restless, vivid, spontaneous. One and all these creatures vibrate with the nervous tension of the age. Other artists have given calm, or momentarily arrested motion. Sargent gives motion itself. With a technique facile as it is assertive this magician of the palette, this paganini of portraiture, has lured us into a new world, a world which we ourselves know well—perhaps too well—but a world hitherto undiscovered by painting.”
Art and Common Sense
By Royal Cortizzoz
Courtesy of Scribner & Son, 1913
“Sargent studying under the wing of Carolus-Duran, was in an atmosphere sympathetic to new ideas, but not at all inhospitable to old ones. While he emerged from his master’s studio a modern in the best sense of the term, it was with a vein of conservatism in him which has never disappeared. Of how many modern painters, endowed, as he has been, superabundant technical brilliance, could it be said that they have never exceeded a certain limit of audacity? I know of no canvas of his which could fairly be called sensational. One of the least conventional of painters, his art nevertheless remains adjusted to the tone and movement of the world in which he lives—surely a fine example of genius expressing its age.
“People complain that Sargent violates the secret recesses of human vanity, and brings hidden, because unlovely, traits out into the light of day; that his candor with the brush is startling, to say the least, and sometimes even perilous. He is accused not simply of painting his sitter, ‘wart and all,’ but of exaggerating the physical or moral disfigurement. If this is true there is something humorous in the spectacle, which is constantly being presented, of men and women running the risk.... Few of his sitters, seem, as we see them on the canvas, to have been passive in his hands. The electric currents of a duel are in the air. Character has thrown down its challenge, the painter has taken it up, and the result is a work in which character is fused with design, playing its part in the artistic unit as powerfully, and almost as vividly, as any one of the tangible facts of the portrait.
“In the light of the long procession of portraits which he has put to his credit, it seems to me that if there is a living painter in whose interpretations of character confidence can be placed, it is Sargent. His range is apparently unlimited. He has painted men and women in their prime and in their old age, and in whatever walk of life he has found them, he has apprehended them with the ‘seeing eye’ that is half the battle.... It is worth noticing that it is not his portraits of men, but in his portraits of women, who illustrate far more histrionically the nervous tension of the age, that Sargent has painted his most unconventional compositions. When his subject has permitted him to exchange nervousness for repose, with what felicity he has seized his opportunity! There is not in modern portraiture a more satisfactory study in dignity and noble stateliness than his ‘Mrs. Marquand.’ (Shown in this exhibition)
“Sargent is himself in his reading of character in his design, and in his style. To say this is not to forget his indebtedness, where style is concerned, to other painters, even, Carolus-Duran. I think there is something of Carolus-Duran in his mere cleverness which like so much that is fluent and self-possessed in modern craftsmanship, could have been developed in Paris and nowhere else. The broad slashing stroke of Hals has taught him something, it is fair to assume; and the influence of Velasquez in his work is sufficiently obvious. Yet there is not in all his painting the ghost of what it would be reasonable to call an imitative passage. He is no more a modern Hals or Velasquez than he is a modern Rembrandt or Botticelli, for he looks at life and art from a totally different point of view, not simply, or grandly, or tragically, or imaginatively, but with the detached intellectual curiosity of a man of the world.”
American Painting and Its Traditions
John Van Dyke
Courtesy of Scribner & Sons, 1919
“Sargent did not wholly achieve art, for some of it was born to him, and some of it, perhaps, was thrust upon him. Training started him right, but his great success is not wholly due to that. Genius alone can account for the remarkable content of his work.
“Sargent’s life has been the result of peculiar circumstances—fortunate circumstances some may think; unfortunate others may hold. At least they have been instrumental in bringing forth an accomplished painter whose art no one can fail to admire. That his work may be admired understandingly it is quite necessary to comprehend the personality of the artist—to understand his education, his associations, his artistic and social environments. For if the man himself is cosmopolitan his art is not less so. It is the perfection of world-style, the finality of method.
“If I apprehend Sargent rightly, such theory of art as he possesses is founded in observation. Some fifteen years ago, in Gibraltar, at the old Cecil Hotel, I was dining with him. That night, as a very unusual thing, Sargent talked about painting—talked of his own volition. He suggested his theory of art in a single sentence: ‘You see things that way’ (pointing slightly to the left) ‘and I see them this way’ (pointing slightly to the right). He seemed to think that would account for the variation or peculiarity of eye and mind, and with a manner of doing—a personal method—there was little more to art. Such a theory would place him in measured agreement with Henry James whose definition of art has been quoted many times: ‘Art is a point of view, and a genius a way of looking at things.’
“A painter who has been looking at human heads for many years sees more than the man who casually looks up to recognize an acquaintance on the street. I do not mean that he sees more ‘character’—that is more scholarship or conceit, or pride of purse or firmness of will or shrewdness of thought, but merely that he sees the physical conformation more completely than others do. Every one sooner or later moulds his own face. It becomes marked or set or shaped in response to continued methods of thinking and acting. When that face comes under the portrait painter’s eye, he does not see the scholar, the banker, the senator, the captain of industry; but he does see perhaps, certain depression of the cheek or lines about the eyes or mouth in contractions of the lips or protrusions of the brow or jaw that appeal to him strongly because they are cast in shadow or thrown up sharply in relief of light. These surface features he paints perhaps with more emphasis than they possess in the original because they appeal to him emphatically, and presently the peculiar look that indicates the character of the man appears. What the look may indicate, or what kind of phase of character may be read in or out of the look, the portrait-painter does not know or care. He paints what he sees and has as little discernment of a character as of a mind. He gives, perhaps, without knowing their meaning, certain protrusions and recessions of the surface before him and lets the result tell what it may. In the production of the portrait accurate observation is more than half the battle. If a painter sees and knows his subject thoroughly, he will have little trouble in telling what he sees and knows; and to say of Sargent that he observes rightly and records truly is to state the case in a sentence.”
OIL PAINTINGS
1 Portrait of Mrs. H. F. Hadden (1878). Loaned by Mrs. Hadden 2 The Lady with the Rose—My Sister (1882). Loaned by Mrs. Hadden 3 “Pointy” (1884). Loaned by Mrs. Hadden 4 The Simplon. Loaned by Mrs. Montgomery Sears 5 Portrait of Major Higginson Loaned by Harvard University 6 Portrait of Ex-President Charles W. Eliot of Harvard University 7 Portrait of President Lowell. Loaned by Harvard University 8 Lake O’Hara. Loaned by Fogg Art Museum 9 Portrait of Miss Mary Elizabeth Garrett. Loaned by Johns Hopkins University 10 Portrait of Mrs. J. William White. Loaned by Mrs. White 11 Portrait of Mrs. Fiske Warren and Daughter. Loaned by Fiske Warren, Esq. 12 Portrait of Mrs. Endicott. Loaned by Mr. Wm. C. Endicott, Jr. 13 Portrait of Mrs. William Hartley Carnegie. Loaned by Mrs. Endicott 14 His Studio. Loaned by Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 15 The Road. Loaned by Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 16 Master and Pupils. Loaned by Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 17 Head of Joseph Jefferson. Loaned by Mr. Sargent 18 Reconnoitering. Loaned by Mr. Sargent 19 Portrait of Joseph Pulitzer, Esq. Loaned by Mrs. Pulitzer 20 Portrait of Mrs. Edward L. Davis and Her Son, Livingston Davis. Loaned by Mr. Livingston Davis, Boston 21 Portrait of a Lady. Loaned by Mr. Augustus P. Loring 22 Portrait of Mrs. Augustus Hemenway. Loaned by Mrs. Hemenway 23 Portrait of Edward Robinson, Esq. Loaned by Mr. Robinson 24 Egyptian Girl 25 Syrian Goats 26 Spanish Stable 27 Camp Fire. Loaned by Mr. Thomas A. Fox 28 Robert Louis Stevenson. Loaned by Mrs. Payne Whitney 29 Portrait of John Hay, Esq. Loaned by Mr. Clarence L. Hay 30 Portrait of Miss Ada Rehan. Loaned by Mrs. G. M. Whitin 31 Portrait of Mr. and Mrs. Field. Loaned by Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts 32 Portrait of Mrs. Charles E. Inches. Loaned by Mrs. Inches, Boston 33 Portrait of Mrs. Adrian Iselin. Loaned by Miss Iselin 34 The Honorable Mrs. Frederick Guest. Loaned by Mrs. Phipps 35 Portrait of Mrs. Phipps and Winston. Loaned by Mrs. Phipps 36 Portrait of General Leonard Wood. Loaned by General Wood 37 The Sulphur Match. Loaned by Mr. Louis Curtis 38 Sketch of Edwin Booth. Loaned by Mrs. Willard Straight 39 A Street in Venice. Loaned by Mrs. Stanford White 40 Cypresses and Pines. Loaned by Copley Gallery 41 Portrait of Mrs. Henry White—neé Margaret Stuyvesant Rutherford. Loaned by Honorable Henry White 42 Sketch of Mrs. Henry White—neé Margaret Stuyvesant Rutherford. Loaned by Honorable Henry White 43 Portrait of Mrs. John J. Chapman. Loaned by Mrs. Richard Aldrich 44 Venetian Interior. Loaned by Carnegie Institute 45 Portrait of Homer Saint-Gaudens and Mother. Loaned by Mrs. Saint-Gaudens 46 Graveyard in Tyrol. Loaned by Robert Treat Paine, 2nd 47 Mussel Gatherers. Loaned by Mrs. Carroll Beckwith 48 The Fountain. Loaned by Art Institute of Chicago 49 Portrait of Mrs. Charles Gifford Dyer. Loaned by Art Institute of Chicago 50 Portrait of Mrs. Thomas Lincoln Manson. Loaned by Mrs. Kiliaen Van Rensselaer 51 Moorish Courtyard. Loaned by Mr. James H. Clarke 52 Venetian Bead Stringers. Loaned by the Buffalo Fine Arts Academy 53 Interior—The Confession. Loaned by Mr. Desmond Fitzgerald 54 Portrait of Miss Katharine Pratt. Loaned by Mr. Frederick S. Pratt 55 Portrait of Mrs. Edward D. Brandegee. Loaned by Mr. Brandegee 56 Portrait of Peter Chardon Brooks, Esq. Loaned by Mrs. R. M. Saltonstall 57 Portrait of Mrs. Dave H. Morris as a Girl. Loaned by Mrs. Morris 58 Portrait of Mr. and Mrs. I. N. Phelps Stokes. Loaned by Mr. Phelps Stokes 59 Portrait of Mrs. Marquand. Loaned by Mr. Allan Marquand 60 The Chess Game. Property of Grand Central Art Galleries
WATER COLORS
61 Palms 62 Shady Paths—Vizcaya 63 Boats at Anchor 64 Derelicts 65 The Pool 66 Muddy Alligators 67 The Basin—Vizcaya 68 The Loggia—Vizcaya 69 The Bathers 70 The Terrace—Vizcaya 71 The Patio—Vizcaya
Loaned by Worcester Art Museum
72 The Mist. Loaned by Mrs. J. D. Blanchard
32 Portrait of Mrs. Charles E. Inches
Loaned by Mrs. Inches, Boston
41 Portrait of Mrs. Henry White—neé Margaret Stuyvesant Rutherford
Loaned by Honorable Henry White
11 Portrait of Mrs. Fiske Warren and Daughter
Loaned by Fiske Warren, Esq.
31 Portrait of Mr. and Mrs. Field
Loaned by Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts
9 Portrait of Miss Mary Elizabeth Garrett
Loaned by Johns Hopkins University
7 Portrait of President Lowell
Loaned by Harvard University
6 Portrait of Ex-President Charles W. Eliot, Formerly of Harvard University
Loaned by Harvard University
58 Portrait of Mr. and Mrs. I. N. Phelps Stokes
Loaned by Mr. Phelps Stokes
2 The Lady with the Rose—My Sister (1882)
Loaned by Mrs. Hadden
5 Portrait of Major Higginson
Loaned by Harvard University
59 Portrait of Mrs. Marquand
Loaned by Mr. Alan Marquand
33 Portrait of Mrs. Adrian Iselin
Loaned by Miss Iselin
30 Portrait of Miss Ada Rehan
Loaned by Mrs. G. M. Whitin
29 Portrait of John Hay, Esq.
Loaned by Mr. Clarence L. Hay
10 Portrait of Mrs. J. William White
Loaned by Mrs. White
50 Portrait of Mrs. Thomas Lincoln Manson
Loaned by Mrs. Kiliaen Van Rensselaer
22 Sketch of Mrs. Augustus Hemenway
Loaned by Mrs. Hemenway
18 Reconnoitering
Loaned by Mr. Sargent
8 Lake O’Hara
Loaned by Fogg Art Museum
14 His Studio
Loaned by Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
51 Moorish Courtyard
Loaned by Mr. James H. Clarke
17 Head of Joseph Jefferson
Loaned by Mr. Sargent
19 Portrait of Joseph Pulitzer, Esq.
Loaned by Mrs. Pulitzer
36 Portrait of General Leonard Wood
Loaned by General Wood
1 Portrait of Mrs. H. F. Hadden (1878)
Loaned by Mrs. Hadden
34 The Honorable Mrs. Frederick Guest
Loaned by Mrs. Phipps
23 Portrait of Edward Robinson, Esq.
Loaned by Mr. Robinson
42 Sketch of Mrs. Henry White—neé Margaret Stuyvesant Rutherford
Loaned by Honorable Henry White
45 Portrait of Homer Saint-Gaudens and Mother
Loaned by Mrs. Saint-Gaudens
35 Portrait of Mrs. Phipps and Winston Loaned by Mrs. Phipps
20 Portrait of Mrs. Edward L. Davis and Her Son, Livingston Davis
Loaned by Mr. Livingston Davis, Boston
43 Portrait of Mrs. John J. Chapman
Loaned by Mrs. Richard Aldrich
37 The Sulphur Match
Loaned by Mr. Louis Curtis
Facts Concerning This Exhibition
In bringing together this retrospective exhibition of Mr. John Sargent’s important works in this country, we feel that we are rendering a service to the American people.
It is unquestionably the most important and most valuable collection ever assembled by a Living Artist, and it is interesting to note that the insurance policy placed on the collection amounts to nearly a million dollars.
The Grand Central Art Galleries is a no profit organization and its efforts are dedicated solely to the interests of the living American Artists.
Mr. John Singer Sargent has personally selected and approved all of the paintings in this exhibition and in choosing this Gallery he has greatly honored this organization.
An Invitation granting free admission to the exhibition to Art Students is being sent to all of the leading Art Schools; an admission charge to all others, to defray the cost of the exhibition, will be made.
FRAMES designed by M. GRIEVE COMPANY
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Two Centuries of Frame Making
In the year 1721 in a small Flemish village lived Grieve, a famous maker of masterful picture frames; whose sole ambition was to please the tastes of the great painters of his time.
The best mid-eighteenth century frames were made by him and his disciples. Grieve was the first to conceive the possibilities in his chosen field and to realize that a painting to be rightly appreciated had to be surrounded by a frame chosen artistically and with due regard to the effect of the painting on the spectator and of the whole as a work of art.
Neither chance nor fashion entered into their construction. On the contrary, they were the result of a distinctive aesthetic sentiment for the beautiful in conjunction with an almost scientific appreciation of what would enhance the intelligent understanding of the picture.
The demand at that time was so insistent that Grieve was obliged to teach the tedious task of gilding and wood-carving to the members of his immediate family; from that moment began this great family of frame makers.
Not content with their conquest in Belgium, the Grieves moved to London, which offered them a larger opportunity, and established there a still more progressive branch of the parent institution.
As is the case with all progressives, they were constantly on the watch for new fields to conquer and as America seemed particularly inviting, M. Grieve the youngest of the family, moved to New York and established the largest hand-carved wood frame factory in the world.
The Grieve of old still lives, and the sacred flame which he kindled is still kept burning by the single American representative of this great family of frame makers.
The American Grieve has progressed with the times. He has revolutionized the ancient art of his forefathers to conform with the demands of modern times; he has perfected a method of manufacturing through quantity production the same quality of art frames which the Grieves before him carved out laboriously at considerable expense.
That the GRIEVE Frame adds quality to your picture is a fact which is recognized by the foremost Art Dealers and Painters in this Country.
Importers of Genuine Antique Gilt Carved Wood Painting Frames
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| REMBRANDT AND HIS SCHOOL. By Prof. John C. Van Dyke. Limited to 1,200 copies | $12.00 |
| EDWIN AUSTIN ABBEY. The Record of His Life and Work. By E. V. Lucas. 200 illus. 2 vols. | $30.00 |
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| NEW GUIDES TO OLD MASTERS (The Galleries of Europe). By Prof. John C. van Dyke. | |
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| REMBRANDT ETCHINGS. With 330 examples. By A. M. Hind. 2 vols. | $12.00 |
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Contemporary British Artists
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With 16 plates in color and 28 in half-tone, illustrating more than 50 prints $25.00
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STEINWAY
THE INSTRUMENT OF THE IMMORTALS
Occasionally the genius of man produces some masterpiece of art—a symphony, a book, a painting—of such surpassing greatness that for generation upon generation it stands as an ideal, unequaled and supreme. For more than three score years the position of the Steinway piano has been comparable to such a masterpiece—with this difference: A symphony, a book, a painting, once given to the world, stands forever as it is. But the Steinway, great as it was in Richard Wagner’s day, has grown greater still with each generation of the Steinway family. From Wagner, Liszt and Rubinstein down through the years to Paderewski, Rachmaninoff and Hofmann, the Steinway has come to be “the Instrument of the Immortals” and the instrument of those who love immortal music.
Steinway & Sons and their dealers have made it conveniently possible for music lovers to own a Steinway.
Prices: $875 and up, plus freight at points distant from New York.
STEINWAY & SONS, Steinway Hall, 109 E. 14th Street, New York
Correct Lighting of Valuable Paintings
Correct illumination is as necessary for the valuable painting in the home as for those in the great galleries.
FRINK REFLECTORS
are scientifically designed to fulfill this purpose. Each picture is treated according to its characteristic requirements. Frink Lighting is used in such prominent galleries as the Freer Memorial Art Galleries as well as in many private galleries.
I. P. FRINK, Inc.
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The paintings
in this exhibit are insured
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of Hartford, Conn.
affiliated with
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ANTIQUE WORKS OF ART
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Portrait painted in 1884 by John S. Sargent
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From the A. T. Sanden Collection just acquired by Ferargil, Inc.
Offering the
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Just transferred from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Together with important works by A. B. Davies, J. Alden Weir, Frank Duveneck, H. G. Dearth, Theodore Robinson, John H. Twachtman, George Inness, Robert Spencer and famous sculptors.
Exhibition of Works by Horatio Walker
February 16th until March 4th, 1924
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Under the direction of Marie Sterner (Mrs. Albert Sterner) The Art Patrons of America, Inc. will hold an Exhibition of American Paintings in London, Paris and Venice during the coming season.
Americans going abroad, it is hoped, will patronize this Exhibition. List of Patrons and other particulars upon request to Mrs. Muriel Boardman, Twenty-Two West Forty-Ninth Street, New York City.
Mrs. Wm. Payne Thompson, President
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Mrs. Muriel Boardman, Secretary
Alaric Simson, Treasurer
Marie Sterner, Director
INTERNATIONAL
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PEYTON BOSWELL, Editor
Just as a gallery exhibition of the finest American painting and sculpture is an inspiration and a source of rich enjoyment, so International Studio is for its readers a monthly exhibition of the significant art of all the world. Quality alone limits its field; painting, sculpture, architecture, the decorative arts, all of these in their most beautiful forms, make it truly America’s greatest art magazine.
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This periodical, unique of its kind in the world, is read by art lovers in scores of countries. It has subscribers in such distant lands as Japan, China, Siam, India, Australia, South Africa and Peru, and is especially looked upon as indispensable by art lovers of the United States, Canada, England and the Continent.
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And Other Noted Masters
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Devoe Canvas is manufactured from the finest raw materials and prepared by experts who with their years of experience are capable of producing Canvas as nearly perfect as possible for human hands to make.
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TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
- Silently corrected obvious typographical errors and variations in spelling.
- Retained archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as printed.