Sargent and Paris and the Gilded Age
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Event begins at 1pm PT / 2pm MT / 3pm CT / 4pm ET
American expatriate artist John Singer Sargent’s notorious painting Madame
X
(a portrait of the glamorous socialite Virginie Amélie Avegno Gautreau), exhibited at the Salon of 1884, takes pride of place in the
Metropolitan Museum of Art’s current exhibition Sargent and Paris.
Beginning with his formative years in Carolus-Duran’s studio and ending with the aftermath of the moment he scandalized “tout Paris,”
art historian Beth S. Gersh-Nesic will contextualize Sargent’s early career, including works by other artists who influenced this
precocious genius (1856-1925).
Beth S. Gersh-Nesic, PhD, is an art historian and the director of the New York Arts Exchange, an arts educational service. Known for her publications on Picasso, Cubism, the École de Paris, and the poet/critic André Salmon, she also taught numerous courses on American art and late 19th century art movements to her undergraduate students at Purchase College, Mercy University, NYU, and the College of New Rochelle.
She has been contributing articles on art history to Bonjour Paris
since 2016. Her most recent publications are translations for Za Mir Press: Pablo
Picasso and André Salmon: The Painter, the Poet and the Portraits
(2019); Pablo
Picasso, André Salmon and “Young French Painting”
(2022); and Ayan
Before Midnight
by Jean-Luc Pouliquen (2024).