For wealthy American families in the late 1800s, having a portrait painted was not simply an artistic choice; it was a declaration of status. As new industrial fortunes multiplied and old family names jostled for position at the top of society, a well-executed portrait hung in a prominent home announced to anyone who saw it that the subject had arrived. The four painters most associated with this world were John Singer Sargent, Thomas Eakins, William Merritt Chase, and Cecilia Beaux, all of whom had trained in Europe and brought a command of French academic technique back to America.
Among them, Beaux stood out as a trailblazer, becoming the first female professor at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and earning a reputation as Sargent's closest rival. Yet, despite her formidable skill, it was Sargent who ultimately became the era's defining portraitist.
Of the four, Sargent became the era's defining portraitist. Born in Florence to American parents, he arrived in the United States in the late 1880s after a scandal in Paris nearly ended his career. His 1884 painting of a Parisian socialite, now known as Madame X, was considered so provocative at the time that commissions dried up overnight and he was forced to rebuild his reputation in London.
Yet, rather than ruining him permanently, this European notoriety ultimately worked in Sargent's favor. By the time he reached American society, the scandal surrounding Madame X had transformed into a fascinating mystique, and his reputation as an internationally acclaimed portraitist had continued to grow.
Families like the Vanderbilts commissioned him repeatedly, and sitting for Sargent became one of the defining markers of having reached the top of American society. He painted quickly, loosely, and with a confidence that made his subjects look exactly as powerful as they wanted to be seen. For the Gilded Age elite, that was precisely the point.