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19. Choice of Subject
Q: Tell me, which do you like best to paint, a man,
a woman or a child?
"I do not think I can answer that question either,
as the point is one I have never considered. Really,
I believe that they all interest me equally. It is fascinating
to analyze in a man what makes him worth noting
his strength of character shown in his face, his masculinity,
his racial peculiarities and the stamp impressed upon
him by his station in life in a woman, her grace
and charm, her refinement, her subtlety and that appealing
quality which is called femininity, in a child its innocent
beauty, its miniature perfection, its delicacy of coloring.
Why should a portrait painter limit himself to specializing
in one sex or in a particular age? He ought to be receptive
of impressions of all kinds and from all sources, and
every new impression that is worth accepting should
be to him a fresh inspiration. But whoever it may be
that an artist is going to paint I am certain that he
cannot hope for success unless there is between him
and his sitter confidence and sympathy."
20. What Makes a Portrait Great?
Q: By way of summing up would you say what in your
opinion entitles a portrait to be called great?
"The best summing up would be to repeat what I
have just said, that confidence and sympathy between
the artist and his sitter are essential, because the
truly great portrait is the one in which this contact
has been so close that it has spurred the artist to
his highest achievement. Really, there is a collaboration
in which the sitter and the artist both contribute something
vital, the sitter a character and a personality which
are inspiring and a right instinct, as well, for self-revelation
in pose and gesture, the artist a special capacity to
observe acutely and to record convincingly those subtleties
of characterization which the sitter consciously or
unconsciously gives him and, in addition a finely cultivated
taste which enables him to make his picture harmonious
in design and satisfying in its color scheme. The artist,
it is true, can only record what he sees, but when the
opportunity is afforded him to look into the mind and
soul of his subject he can, if he is equal to his task,
produce a portrait in which everyone will be able not
only to recognize the physical features of the sitter,
but to perceive also the deeper-lying qualities by which
he is distinguished. That would be what I should call
a great portrait."
What responsible work then it is, portrait painting.
"Of course it is. On the portrait painter lies
a very great responsibility indeed, for he has not only
to satisfy his contemporaries but also on many occasions
to create for the benefit of future generations an historic
document of his times and this document would be without
authority if it were not at least as much a study of
character as a representation of plainly visible facts.
The merely exact reproduction of the sitter's features
at a particular moment as a camera would do-is scarcely
worthy to be called a portrait at all; I say, once more,
that in this branch of artistic practice the only painting
that can be held to justify itself is the one which
in the rendering of those features expresses the full
mental and moral stature of the human being to whom
they belong. Here it is that the individuality of the
painter appears and here it is that his powers are subjected
to the severest test. Different artists painting the
same sitter would produce differing results, because
their individualities would vary; so, you see, the inadequacy
of the artist who has assumed a responsibility he has
not qualified himself to bear would show in his work
and he must stand for all time self-convicted of failure."
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