The Earrings
Of Madame X-A Journey Through The Arts-John Singer Sargent’s Portrait Of Madame X (Yes, I Know Everybody
Knows Who The Woman Was But Let’s Keep Up Appearances For The Sake Of Grand Art)
By Laura Perkins
One of the positive
things about the dramatic change of leadership at this publication in 2017 has
been the efforts on the part of new site manager Greg Green to give the audience,
on occasion, some background about how decisions are made in this cutthroat no
holds barred publishing business. This piece, something of an introductory piece
for what is projected to be an on-going series if beautiful gentile if sometimes
half-witted Greg doesn’t get sidetracked and demand one and all start writing about
bowling or something like he did when he took over the reins and went berserk having
every writer, young or old, paying hosannas to Marvel/DC Comic Universe comic
book characters come to film nonsense, is one of those times. (By the way although
I was not here at the time I am very well aware that “dramatic change of leadership”
was nothing less than a purge of previous manager Allan Jackson and has since
been recognized as such by all parties concerned except maybe Pollyanna Lance
Lawrence. My long-time companion Sam Lowell, now on the skids down the food
chain cast the deciding vote against keeping his longtime friend since elementary
school Allan on under the theory that the “torch had to be passed”)
My understanding
is that a few months ago as Greg Green was looking over the archives, he noted that
there were very few pieces, sketches he calls them as did Allan before him, about
art, by this he meant high art, cultured museum worthy art, except by way of making
some political point. Not much what he called “art for art’s sake” stealing from
some old time art theorist who hammered away at the idea that this was the artists
highest duty (after getting paid the market rate for his or her work). Apparently,
Greg had been getting some flak from the readership which given the demographics
now has plenty of time to go to art museums or take that art class they meant to
take about forty, fifty years ago (although now with very unsteady hand).
He called Sam Lowell
in, now the head of the Editorial Board among his other duties, to see what to
do about the deficiency. (One of the fall-outs from that fierce internal
free-for-all which rattled the publication for months in 2017 was the institution
of an Editorial Board which “theoretically” was to oversee the site manager’s
work so that another Allan Jackson calling all the shots on his own hook would
not lead to another “youth” uprising. Sam, have thrust the knife in his long-time
friend’s back no matter the reason as recognized even by him in his candid moments
was “rewarded” with the chair of the Board.) Greg’s idea was that he had heard
that Sam had when he was in high school been directed by his art teacher to
apply to his alma mater, Massachusetts School of Art in Boston, and he would
grease the way for a scholarship or something.
Now Sam, as
did some of the other older writers here came from desperate poverty in the
working- class section, the Acre they called it, of North Adamsville south of
Boston. His mother freaked out, a mother I never met since Sam and I did not
take up company before he had gone through three failed marriages and was
pretty estranged from his strait-laced Irish Catholic family. Her argument was
that no way was a son of hers going to be some bohemian, beatnik is the word I
think Sam said she used, starving artist in some cold-water flat garret with the
rats and thugs for neighbors. That dampener plus his own inclinations toward
cinema and politics pushed him in another direction. Still Sam was the only known
candidate to unofficially lead the way to more art pieces and projects.
Until recently
that is when Sam started that slide down the food chain, my expression, after
he decided that he had to playing avenging angel against the light-hearted
harmless bill of fare that the Hallmark Channel presents at Christmas time. And
of which I am a devoted follower of every year. Not the “fanatic” mentioned in
one of his so-called reviews but having had a rough and tumble time growing up in
upstate New York where my farmer father thought Christmas was an extra occasion
to get drunk as a skunk with his farmer buddies I get some relief from the sad
feelings I usually get this time of year by watching and “vegging out” while
having the shows on in the background. Sam got some much blowback from his comments,
including from me that he decided, and Greg approved, to do reviews of films
with the idea of whether they would be Hallmark Channel-worthy or not. He is
still working through that nonsense and good luck to him, no, bad luck to him
on this one for posing the idea to Greg and for following through which has caused
many a battle in the Perkins-Lowell household. And rightly so for the not so gentle
into that good night bastard. I will, I have gotten even with him on that account.
That left the
art review spot open with no one to replace the self-inflicted wounded warrior.
That is until Leslie Dumont, a good friend of mine, mentioned to Greg that I
had taken an art class once, and maybe had gone to an art museum as well. With that
resume he approached me with kid gloves and tried to coax me into doing the art
stuff until he could find somebody else. I told him I had not taken an art
class but an art appreciation class you know a survey of what some art professor though we
the great unwashed needed to see when I was at Rochester and had merely done
some sketches, really some doodling at meetings when some windbag went on and
one, on my own and had gone to an art museum or two in my time. That scant
expertise was enough to get me the assignment. With the proviso that I could wander
into whatever I liked and not have to make any disclaimer that I was some kind
of art curator, had written a monogram or sometime.
Hence as my first
subject, as noted in the headline of this piece, I am making commentary on American
expatriate John Singer Sargent’s The
Portrait Of Madame X another American expatriate which has intrigued ever
since I was a young woman wondering about the X part, about why she had, or he,
had to use an alias. Wondering too about those rumored affairs, about who she was
sleeping with to get herself up the Parisian social ladder which had to say the
least be tricky for even up and coming French women never mind an American who
married her husband, a wheeler-dealer banker for his dough and his connections.
Of course in
the gentile art world, the so-called academy, the tabloid critics and the erstwhile
collectors who were clueless about what was good art and what was “going through
the paces” centered in that late 19th century in Paris and nowhere else
the whole thing was a scandal, scandalous since our Madame was showing to
little strap, or rather too wayward a strap suggesting, well I guess suggesting
more problems keeping her clothes on as the wine and night wore on, that exquisite
dress and maybe too much bosom as well in that well-padded upper dress section.
(Believe me as a small-breasted woman fitted that way by nature and genetics when
I was younger, I was looking for every advance short of surgical breast enlargement
to enhance my figure in that area so I know padding when I see it. Recently in
preparing this sketch I had a close look at the dresses some of Sargent’s Mayfair
swell sitters wore at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston so yes Madame was well
padded-and painted on those bare shoulders with some kind of exotic powders to
get so her complexion so white. By the way observing the structure of the
dresses no way was that whalebone going to “slip” except in the imagination of
those three name men who were thinking such things, or maybe all men regardless
of number of names in their monikers.)
Scandal aside,
which from what I gathered from one of her lovers who wrote one of those “tell-all”
books after she passed away she saw as a selling point on her way up the social
ladder, it is very interesting that she did not show her front face and left the
profile in one direction and her posed body in another. Vanity thy name is Madame
X. The real reason beyond the allure of the profile in contrast to her
full-figured black gown was that she had and ever so slight wrinkle under her
left eye and refused to let Sargent who was no gentleman in this matter paint a
frontal face position with that hideous deformity. (I will for now not speak of
an even more obvious reason for no frontal pose-that beak of a nose she was
trying to downplay but will stick with the wrinkle which more women of a certain
age these days can relate to-despite the beauties of plastic surgery and the
like) This information on Madame’s distress over that sign of aging wrinkle from
the guy who provided Sargent with his paint mixtures (and who also for a short time
on the sly when Madame was in one of her “plebian” lover moods was her lover).
Confirmed by the house maid who for a few francs (now Euros) would let the guy,
name unmentionable because the family subsequently became very famous, into the
back door to Madame’s boudoir.
Frankly Madame
looked like an “ice queen,” a kind that Sam jokingly mentioned to me one time
before we were intimate that he sensed I was (wrongly as he will now freely
admit). This Madame X ice queen is nothing but drop dead beautiful who holds that
beauty like a sword which even now in the modern age among a certain set,
actresses come to mind, is a very effective way to get up that ladder, she was always
seeking. That “mystery” and our lady reeks of it no question got her as far as
the finance minister in the Thier’s government which meant she was on her way.
(Apparently her banker husband was happy since it solved a little solvency problem
he was having which got smoothed over I assume during Madame’s calculated bed talk
with that smitten finance minister). Some say, and I believe Sargent did too,
think this work was his greatest portrait. Maybe even his best work. I will not
argue with that estimation but to this day I still wonder how those women got those
tiny waists without suffocating in those horrible corsets.
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