Heiress: Sargent’s American Portraits

​An exhibition on the centenary of John Singer Sargent’s death. Review by Peter Clossick PPLG.

John Singer Sargent (1856-1925), an American and a member of the New English Art Club, painted these eighteen oil portraits and drawings, which are on display, some of which have never been publicly exhibited. He was a hugely popular portrait painter of his time and remains a beloved figure among many fans today. Most of these heiresses were painted in their twenties. They were America’s “Dollar Princesses.” Young American women who crossed the Atlantic to marry the British aristocrats in the “cash for coronets” marriage cliche. Sargent was a society painter, painting beautiful and wealthy women.

Sargent made more than thirty of these portraits. Not all the women were rich, and some married for love. This is a quote from Marie Corelli in 1905 –
“…there is always a British title going a-begging – always some decayed or degenerative or semi-drunken peer, ready and willing to devour, monster-like…an American virgin, provided bags of bullion are flung, with her, into his capacious maw.”

Between 1870 and 1914, 102 American women married into the British peerage and the upper classes.

The first painting I looked at, which I have cropped to remove an imposing gold frame, is of Pauline Astor, who was born into the Astor dynasty. 

Portrait de Pauline Astor (1880-1970),1898-99

She married Captain Herbert Spender-Clay, who was untitled. Her father, William Waldorf Astor, commissioned the painting soon after her eighteenth birthday. Sargent has included her spaniel “Mussie” tugging at the corner of her dress.

The full-length oil portraits are glamorous, powerful, candid and perceptive, with technical virtuosity rarely seen in today’s art world. Sargent could make the rich look very much richer. He held up a mirror to the rich so they could understand how wealthy they were, which is not unlike today’s art market within the higher echelons.

Edith, Lady Playfair (Edith Russell), 1884

This is a portrait of Edith Playfair nee Russell (1848-1932). She married “Baron” Playfair at the age of 29 in 1878, when he was 59, marking his third marriage. Her stepson remembered Edith as “one of the last capitalists to drive round Hyde Park every afternoon in a carriage-and-pair.”

Roger Fry describes Sargent’s art as “applied art.” He painted the social mask, holding up a mirror to the rich, demonstrating the “grand style” of living.

An interior in Venice, 1899

In 1899, Sargent depicts a moment in time within the Palazzo Barbaro in Venice. Bright sunlight from the canal bounces off the elegantly dressed family and touches gilded tables.

He was as fluid with charcoal drawing as he was with painting, and numerous drawings are on display.

1912, Countess of Ancaster – Eloise Heathcote-Drummond-Willoughby nee Breese (1882 – 1953)

The most striking aspect of Sargent’s painting and drawing is its simplicity, which overflows with perfection, life, movement and visual drama – painted with extraordinary breadth and freedom, glowing with life, making an ineffaceable impression. It is no wonder he was in such high demand for portraits.

Nancy Astor, 1908

In 1906, Nancy Witcher Astor, nee Langhorne (1879-1964), married Waldorf Astor.

Sargent can be somewhat overlooked due to the early modernist abandonment of naturalist correspondence as a criterion, with a premium placed on the strength and authenticity of individual responses and feelings and increased relaxation of the requirements of naturalism. He was painting alongside artists like Van Gogh, Gauguin, and Picasso. He studied under the portrait painter Carolus Duran (1838)917); he followed in the tradition of Velázquez and Manet – with the virtuoso brushstroke, painting directly with a loaded brush.

The venue for the exhibition, Kenwood House, is delightful and one I recall fondly from my childhood when it still had red squirrels roaming the surrounding woods. As a slice of history, the exhibition is well worth the experience.

Peter Clossick PPLG, May 2025

Heiress: Sargent’s American Portraits 
16 May to 5 Oct 2025
Kenwood House, Hampstead Lane, Hampstead, NW3 7JR
Curated by English Heritage.

 

All images were taken on my iPhone.

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