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John Singer Sargent, Gathering Flowers at Twilight
John Singer Sargent - Gathering Flowers at Twilight - Art Prints and Posters
John Singer Sargent
Gathering Flowers at Twilight
Sale Price: $19.00
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14 x 11 in $19.00
20 x 16 in $35.00
28 x 22 in $65.00
40 x 32 in $119.00
Paper Size: 14 x 11 in.
Image Size: 8 5/8 x 7 in.
Item No: 200487
Item Type: Archival Print
Source: The Estate Collection
PRODUCT DETAILS
Quality: Every item in our archival print collection is a digital reproduction sourced from the original artwork hanging in the museum. Essentially, there is no way to get a more accurate and representative reproduction of the original art.

All items are published on 300gsm archival cotton rag paper, using the highest quality inksets available today.

Authorized Reproductions: All unframed prints are published with the museum logo watermark in the border. This custom touch proves that the item is a museum authorized reproduction of the original artwork.

A portion of every purchase from 1000Museums goes to support the arts and our partner museums.

JOHN SINGER SARGENT BIOGRAPHY
Sargent, John Singer, 1856–1925, American painter, b. Florence, Italy, of American parents, educated in Italy, France, and Germany. In 1874 he went to Paris, where he studied under Carolus-Duran. He remained there for 10 years except for visits to the United States, Spain, and Africa. From his first exhibit in the Salon of 1878 he received early recognition, and by 1884, when he moved to London, he already enjoyed a high reputation as a portrait painter. He spent most of the remainder of his life there, painting the dashing portraits of American and English social celebrities for which he is famous. For a considerable period of time, Sargent was the world's best-known and most highly paid portrait painter. In 1890 he was commissioned by the architect Charles McKim to paint a series of murals, The History of Religion, for the Boston Public Library. He completed them in 1916.

An untiring and prolific painter of great facility, Sargent was particularly brilliant in his treatment of textures. In his portraiture he showed great virtuosity in his handling of the brushstrokes, quickly capturing the likeness and vitality of his subject. His portraits nearly always flattered his sitters; he remarked upon this once, saying his was a pimp's profession. During his youth, and again after 1910, he deserted portrait painting long enough to produce a large number of brilliant impressionistic landscapes in watercolor, many of them painted in Venice and the Tyrol. Of these, fine collections are in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the Brooklyn Museum.

His portraits and figure pieces are housed in many private and public collections in England and the United States. Well-known examples are the portrait of Isabella Stewart Gardner and El Jaleo (Gardner Mus., Boston); the portraits of Madame X, the Wyndham sisters, Henry Marquand, and William Merritt Chase (Metropolitan Mus.); The Fountain (Art Inst., Chicago); and Children of E. D. Boit (Mus. of Fine Arts, Boston). During the late 1990s and early 2000s Sargent was subject to wide-ranging critical reappraisal, provoking a renewed appreciation for his work.

Used with permission. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2001 Columbia University Press

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