Artwork Details
- Title
- Elizabeth Winthrop Chanler (Mrs. John Jay Chapman)
- Artist
- Date
- 1893
- Location
- Dimensions
- 49 3⁄8 x 40 1⁄2 in. (125.4 x 102.9 cm.)
- Credit Line
- Gift of Chanler A. Chapman
- Mediums
- Mediums Description
- oil on canvas
- Classifications
- Subjects
- Object — art object — painting
- Architecture Interior — domestic — living room
- Architecture Interior — domestic — house
- Object Number
- 1980.71
Artwork Description
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.
Exhibition Label, Smithsonian American Art Museum, 2006
John Singer Sargent painted twenty-six-year-old Elizabeth Chanler while she was in London for her brother's wedding. "Bessie" Chanler's determination and strength of character emerge forcefully in Sargent's remarkable portrait. The top half of the portrait is ordered and still. Chanler's gaze is direct, her face centered between two painting: a Madonna and Child and a figure of an old woman copied from Frans Hals. The lower half, however, is full of tension. Chanler's arms, leg-of-mutton sleeves, and the pillows seem to wrestle with one another; only her clasped fingers and elbows keep everything under control.
Smithsonian American Art Museum: Commemorative Guide. Nashville, TN: Beckon Books, 2015.