Cecilia Beaux Self-portrait, 1894 |
When we think of the top portrait artists around the
turn of the century the names John Singer Sargent or James McNeill Whistler
often come to mind, but not that of Cecilia Beaux. Yet on the America n scene at
least, she was not just one of the best female artists working at the time, but
among a select few first-rate portrait painters of either sex to be found. Her
work won awards in New York, Philadelphia, and Paris, she was a full-fledged
member of the male-dominated National Academy, and in 1902, she set up her easel
in the White House, painting Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt and her daughter, Ethel.
Her work is, in fact, often compared to that of Sargent but there are also
notable influences from Manet and Degas as well. There are Impressionistic
elements too, and also a thorough understanding of Japanese art in her tendency
to flatten the picture plane and utilize strong, cropped, reductive masses in
her portraits.
Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt and Daughter Ethel, 1902, Cecilia Beaux |
Cecilia was born in 1855, the daughter of a French father
and an invalid mother. Her mother died during Cecilia's early childhood
whereupon her father departed for his homeland, leaving his daughter's
upbringing to her maternal grandmother and aunt. The aunt just happened to be the
painter, Eliza Lewitt, and a strong role model for her niece. Raised in a
matriarchal family, and with their wholehearted blessings, she decided early on
to become an artist (a circumstance rare for a woman at that time). By the time
she was sixteen, she was studying with the historical/religious painter,
Catherine Drinker (whose brother happened to be married to Cecilia's sister).
From there she moved on to the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine arts where she
studied under Thomas Eakins as well as William Sartain and a Dutch artist, Adolf
Van der Whalen. Topping off her education in the best male tradition, she next
traveled to Paris where she enrolled in the Academie Julian and studied under
academicians, Bouguereau, Fleury, Dagnan-Bouvert, and Courtois. It was a rich
pedigree for any artist and a very rare mix for a young woman barely into her
thirties.
Man with the Cat (Henry Sturgis Drinker), 1898, Cecilia Beaux |
Back in New York, as many artist have done, she got her start
painting portraits of friends and family. The Dreamer from 1894 is a typical,
richly evocative example of her work from this period in which she goes far in
achieving an overall mood, not just a good likeness from her sitter. Her work
can be seen maturing in her Ernesta with Nurse, also from 1894, and her
portrait of Man with the Cat (Henry Sturgis Drinker) from 1898. Art historians consider these
years her peak as she gained popularity, and indeed, some degree of world
renown. However with her growing popularity and no doubt increased demands on
her time and talents, many consider her later work, while being extraordinarily
adept technically, as lacking in insight and gradually more and more
superficial. By the 1920s, styles and tastes had changed but hers hadn't. She
died in 1942 in relative obscurity at the age of 87, having made her marks as an
artist, and passed her brushes on to others of her sex to carry on in her
place.
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