"A portrait is a picture in which there is just a tiny little something not quite right about the mouth." -- John Singer Sargent

Thursday, April 2, 2020

Elizabeth Winthrop Chanler


This 1893 portrait of Elizabeth Winthrop Chanler (Mrs. John Jay Chapman) by John Singer Sargent hangs in the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington DC.
According to Sargent, twenty-six-year old Elizabeth Chanler had “the face of the Madonna and the eyes of a child.” This portrait shows a beautiful, well-bred woman who has learned to be strong. When Elizabeth was still a girl, her mother died, leaving her to help care for seven younger brothers and sisters. Sargent painted her while she was in London for a brother's wedding, and the artist composed the portrait as if to suggest a turmoil of emotions in his sitter.
The top half of the portrait is ordered and still. Elizabeth's gaze is direct, her face centered between two paintings: a Madonna and Child and a figure of an old woman copied from Frans Hals. But the lower half is full of tension. Her arms, leg-of-mutton sleeves, and the pillows seem to wrestle with one another; only her clasped fingers and elbows keep everything under control. Perhaps the artist wished to show Elizabeth as a woman who, despite early hardships, was neither maiden nor matron. Sargent was often dismissed by his contemporaries as a “society portraitist,” but his paintings always convey the human story behind the image. -- SAAM



Director's Choice
Elizabeth Winthrop Chanler
by John Singer Sargent
Feb 3, 2014

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