By Luana Luconi Winner
Edited by Lauren Harris
Edited by Lauren Harris
The Art of the Portrait Journal
Issue No. 32, 2nd Quarter 2006
Portrait of Mrs. Larz Anderson |
Eliza Cecilia
Beaux and her older sister grew up in the care of their maternal grandmother
and aunts in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in the mid 1800’s. The family home schooled the girls and
encouraged them to be creative and imaginative while instilling a strong work
ethic. When Cecilia turned 14, she spent two years at a Philadelphia finishing
school before beginning her formal art training with her distant cousin, author
and painter, Catherine Ann Drinker Javier.
An
uncle then underwrote her classes at Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. While Cecilia’s
early subjects were family members, she became particularly fond of double
portraits, allowing her to create inventive compositions that explored
relationships between the sitters. With
the creation of Les derniers jours
d’enfance, a loving, tender painting of her sister and first-born nephew,
Cecilia’s life changed forever. Les derniers won the Mary Smith Prize in
1885 at the PAFA and launched her career.
At 32,
Cecilia went to France to study at the Academie Julian and the Atelier
Colarossi, and studying also with Charles Lazar and Alexander Harrison. Traveling to France at least seven times
throughout her life, she is said to have felt greatly indebted to the French in
the development of her art.
Her
reputation grew quickly as this business-wise artist deliberately chose notable
men and glamorous society women as her subjects. “It doesn’t pay to paint everybody,” said
Beaux. Her subjects grew to include
Theodore Roosevelt, Mrs. Andrew Carnegie, Georges Clemenceau, Admiral Lord
David Beatty, and Henry James.
Throughout
her last 18 years, Cecilia struggled with poor eyesight and arthritis. When a
broken hip crippled her and prevented her from painting, she chose to write her
autobiography and lecture.
Beaux holds the honor of
being the first full time female instructor at the Pennsylvania Academy of the
Fine Arts, and was honored with membership in prestigious organizations
including the Societe des Beaux-Arts in Paris, American Academy of Arts and
Letters, and the National Academy of Design.
Appointed the official portraitist by the U. S. War Portraits
commission, she received honorary degrees from Yale and the University of Pennsylvania.
When
William Merritt Chase presented Cecilia Beaux with the Carnegie Institute’s
Gold Medal in 1899, he said, “Miss Beaux is not only the greatest living woman
painter, but the best that has ever lived.”
Recommended reading:
Out of print
Background with
Figures, Cecilia Beaux, The Riverside
Press, 1930
Cecilia Beaux,
Portrait of an Artist, Pennsylvania
Academy of Fine Arts,
1974
Cecilia Beaux and the
Art of Portraiture, Tara Leigh Tappart, Smithsonian/National Portrait
Gallery, 1995
Available by
appointment
The papers of Cecilia Beaux, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine
Arts, Philadelphia, PA
In print
Cecilia Beaux: A Modern Painter in the Guilded Age, Alice A.
Carter, Rizzoli, 2005
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