Throughout his career, the celebrated American painter John Singer Sargent (18561925) created portraits of artists, writers, actors, and musicians, many of whom were his close friends. Because these works were rarely commissioned, he was free to create images that were more radical than those he made for paying clients. He often posed these sitters informallyin the act of painting, singing, or performing, for example. Together, the portraits constitute a group of experimental paintings and drawingssome of them highly charged, others sensual, and some of them intimate, witty, or idiosyncratic. Opening at The Metropolitan Museum of Art on June 30, the exhibition Sargent: Portraits of Artists and Friends brings together about 90 of these distinctive portraits, including numerous loans from private collections. It also explore in depth the friendships between Sargent and
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