"John Sargent and Henry James
Henry James (1843-1916)
Henry James, an expatriate American writer who settled in England and eventually became an British citizen. He is considered by most to be one of the great english literary writers and among his best known works is The Ambassadors.
James lived for a period in Paris but hated it and finally found his home in London and was a big supporter of JSS coming to England after the Madame X scandal.
During his period at Broadway with Sargent in 1885, he was writing The Bostonians and The Princess (1884-1886). His reputation by then had already been well founded along with his age, being one of the oldest, made him by far the dean of this small colony of artists gathered there.
It was James, who was one of the first to recognize Sargent, and praised him to American audiences. When Sargent eventually ventured to the United States in 1887 for his first portrait commissions on this side of the ocean, Henry James introduced Americans to this American painter in an unheard of (for such a young artist) nine page spread extolling his talents for Harper's New Monthly Magazine. The clout that James had with Harper's and the generous appraisal from his friend, went a long way at promoting Sargent's career in the eyes of the public -- John would never forget that.
John Singer Sargent (1856-1925)
Sargent presented this charcoal portrait to King George V in 1916, two weeks after James's death (James died in July). James had been given The Order of Merit by King Edward VII previously, and this drawing has since been kept with a collection of other honorees.
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Sargent's Henry James
Charcoal — 24 1/2 x 16 in.
Royal Library at Windsor Castle
The Order was founded by King Edward VII on his coronation in 1902 to give special recognition to those who had rendered exceptional service to the Crown or towards the advancement of the Arts, Learning, Literature and Science.
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Sargent's Henry James
Oil on canvas — 85.1 x 67.3 in.
National Portrait Gallery, London
When Sargent did this portrait of James, it was for his seventieth birthday (Sargent was 57). John had tried to paint James earlier in their friendship but both had felt the painting had been a failure. This painting was attacked by a women's suffragette in the attempt to bring notice to her cause. Sargent would later fix it."
I love this portrait.
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