Тёмный

REVIEW - John Singer Sargent Portrait Painter - Tate Britain London. 

ArtTop10.com
Подписаться 4 тыс.
Просмотров 4,6 тыс.
50% 1

ArtTop10.com Founder Robert Dunt reviews Sargent and Fashion, at Tate Britain, London.
Subscribe to ArtTop10.com :: bit.ly/2vfN3ZQ
Robert Dunt - www.robertdunt.com/ - robert-dunt-art.myshopify.com...
Support the channel - www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr...
Subscribe to my other channel TravelDog - food and travel films - TravelDog - / @_traveldog_
The press release says -
Tate Britain opens a major exhibition dedicated to the great portrait painter John Singer Sargent (1856-1925). It reveals Sargent’s ground-breaking role as a stylist, fashioning the image his sitters presented to the world through sartorial choices. Staged in collaboration with the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, the exhibition features 60 works, including rare loans as well as works drawn from Tate and MFA’s extensive collections. These are shown alongside more than a dozen period dresses and accessories, many of which were worn by his sitters. Several of these garments have been reunited for the first time with Sargent’s portraits of their wearers, offering a fresh perspective on the most celebrated portraitist of his generation and the society in which he worked.
Sargent was renowned for the ability to bring his subjects to life. Rather than being driven purely by the sensibilities of his wealthy clientele, he used dress and fashion as a powerful tool to establish their individuality while proclaiming his own aesthetic agenda. He worked collaboratively with his sitters, but also took creative liberties, changing and omitting details as he saw fit. He regularly chose their outfits or manipulated their clothing, as in Lady Sassoon 1907, which is displayed at the start of the exhibition alongside the original black taffeta opera cloak worn in the image, revealing how he pulled, wrapped, and pinned the fabric to add drama to his portrait. In this respect, Sargent was working in a similar way to how an art director at a fashion shoot would today.
The exhibition tells the stories behind the artist’s key patrons, including nobility and influential members of the community. Collectively, Sargent’s portraits of the elite comprise the most compelling representation of fashionable high society at the turn of the decade. Highlights include Lady Helen Vincent, Viscountess d’ Abernon 1904 and Mrs. Charles E. Inches (Louise Pomeroy) 1887, which is juxtaposed with the red velvet evening dress illustrated. The regalia worn by Charles Stewart, sixth Marquess of Londonderry at the Coronation of Edward VII 1904 is reunited with the painting to show how the artist conveyed both rank and personality through clothing. Sargent was able to take even more creative freedoms with non-commissioned portraits, such as his iconic painting of socialite Virginie Amélie Gautreau, Madame X 1883-4, which caused a stir at the Salon by salaciously showing Mme Gautreau with one diamond strap falling from her shoulder. The exhibition presents both Tate and The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s versions of this infamous work. Sargent’s artistic process and relationships are further explored using photographs, drawings, garments, and accounts written by his sitters. Key works such as Mrs Montgomery Sears 1899 are shown alongside Mrs Sears’ own dresses and her photographs of Sargent at work, while Mrs Fiske Warren and her Daughter Rachel 1903 is displayed with photographs documenting the portrait sittings in process.
Sargent and Fashion also explores the artist’s subversion of social codes and conventions through portraiture. His clothing choices suggest the blurring of characteristics that once defined masculine and feminine appearance, reflecting the shifting ground of traditional gender roles at the end of the 19th century. Sargent's portrait Vernon Lee 1881 exemplifies this approach. Lee was the pseudonym of the British writer Violet Paget, who used the name professionally and personally. Her preference for severe, almost masculine clothing, shows a refusal to conform to conventional notions of femininity. The exhibition also features one of Sargent’s most dramatic and unconventional male portraits, Dr Pozzi at Home 1881, depicting the aesthete surgeon Samuel-Jean Pozzi in a flamboyant red dressing gown and Turkish slippers.

Опубликовано:

 

20 фев 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 24   
@clamda
@clamda 5 месяцев назад
a great privilege to see this exhibition, many thanks
@ArtTop10
@ArtTop10 5 месяцев назад
Thank you! Very glad you liked it!
@user-ts4rd7sv5n
@user-ts4rd7sv5n 5 месяцев назад
Lovely! You have made me want to go to this exhibition!
@ArtTop10
@ArtTop10 5 месяцев назад
Excellent! It’s a great show!
@davidpowellseattle
@davidpowellseattle 5 месяцев назад
Beautiful. Thank you.
@ArtTop10
@ArtTop10 5 месяцев назад
Really glad you liked it! Thank you!
@chrisedwick
@chrisedwick 5 месяцев назад
fabulous walkthrough, fabulous commentary....what an amazing show...a real master of painting...how lucky you were to see them in the flesh...for me at least wonderful to look over your shoulder, so to speak....extremely grateful...annoying no such walk through provided by the miserable Tate gallery even though all us taxpayers pay for this via the sponsorship from the Department of Culture Media and Sport...
@ArtTop10
@ArtTop10 5 месяцев назад
Thank you for much for your comments. I really appreciate it! It’s a great show and the painting in it is wonderful!
@ArtTop10
@ArtTop10 5 месяцев назад
I know what you mean about a Tate walkthrough. There was one of a Hockney show at the Royal Academy during lockdown - done by the RA. They made me take my vid of the show down. It was one of the few I didn’t chat about as I walked around because of the mask!
@chrisedwick
@chrisedwick 5 месяцев назад
the guy could really paint...its magical when someone has such skill.. not to achieve a photographic result but something that is all wonderful smoke and mirrors...like Velazquez...up close looks like just vague brushstrokes but step back and magically it becomes a satin velvet dress...! @@ArtTop10
@chrisedwick
@chrisedwick 5 месяцев назад
its such an arrogant attitude...anyway we need you!!! thanks again...@@ArtTop10
@romanveli2377
@romanveli2377 5 месяцев назад
Genius JOHN SINGER SARGENT 👏👏👏🎨❤️
@ArtTop10
@ArtTop10 4 месяца назад
👍
@allenvoss7977
@allenvoss7977 5 месяцев назад
MFA in Boston ? I was there last year , just missed this exhibit. 😢
@ArtTop10
@ArtTop10 5 месяцев назад
When you are pounding around galleries abroad it is quite easy to miss stuff you tired and trying to pack it all in!
@paulashford4155
@paulashford4155 4 месяца назад
Awesome video
@ArtTop10
@ArtTop10 4 месяца назад
Glad you enjoyed it!
@gradosa8272
@gradosa8272 5 месяцев назад
🙁I didn’t make it to the exhibition. Sold out!😭😭😭
@ArtTop10
@ArtTop10 4 месяца назад
Sorry! I’m guessing you could still become a member of the Royal Academy. Like anyone can, you pay something for the year and see all the exhibitions for free. Then u can just turn up with your card and they’ll let you in.
@TMPreRaff
@TMPreRaff 5 месяцев назад
Maybe better without narration...
@ArtTop10
@ArtTop10 5 месяцев назад
The narration is my thing for the channel.
@Eudaimonia88
@Eudaimonia88 4 месяца назад
​@@ArtTop10 You missed the point!
@thomascreeley867
@thomascreeley867 27 дней назад
The narration sets it apart from other art trip videos (in my opinion).
Далее
Fashioning Sargent - James Finch
45:28
Просмотров 467
Silent Disco '23 - Graham Crowley Curator Tour
1:16:10
Art Of The Night (Waldemar Januszczak Documentary)
59:40
Inside the World of Edgar Degas: Art, Life, and Legacy
1:21:04
LA ART SHOW 2024 Walk Around POV 4K
3:17:19
Просмотров 112 тыс.