Question of the Day | 03/25/2009 11:00 pm
Rembrandt? Picasso? O'Keeffe? Tell us: Who is your favorite artist?

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There’s a portrait by J. S. Sargent that just knocks my socks off: Madame X
http://jssgallery.org/Paintings/Madame_X.htm
And then there is Giorgione’s La Tempesta that moves my heart.
f p, You follow art and know it well. . and I wonder if you know the story, the relationship of Isabella Stewart Gardner and Sargent, whose portrait of her hangs in Boston in her home/museum/place of beauty. Unfortunately, Isabella was as far from a raving beauty as one could be, but to her, Sargent’s portrait of her beat all others out. However, her husband Jack was always brutally honest. He said "Looks like hell, but it looks like you". The interplay of the Sargent-Gardner relationship is worth reading about if you haven’t. I have never been able to get "it" and the museum out of my mind. It takes me to another world.
Click here: ISGM The Museum: IntroductionJoaneeeee
Joan, Sargent came to Asheville to work on 6 portraits at the Bilmore House.
Stories there are abundant as the house and grounds were still in different stages of construction.
He also painted Olmsted the architect of the estate and Central Park, Olmsted was not well and his son was standing in for him. My favorite of all 6 is actually Olmsted.
"The enjoyment of scenery employs the mind without fatigue and yet exercises it, tranquilizes it and yet enlivens it; and thus, through the influence of the mind over the body, gives the effect of refreshing rest and reinvigoration of the whole system."
— Fredrick Law Olmsted
As one who exalts in all aspects of nature, Olmsted’s contribution to our country’s parks has been a lasting one. But your story of Biltmore intrigued me — and I have spent time looking up this story - which all should read as it is a story — and then some. You find yourself caught up in Olmsted’s life, finding the private parts all but unknown to us, but oh so fascinating. I suggest for others who want to a good "read":
I often talk to the gardeners there(Biltmore), they are all well informed and every bridge and road
they cross they will tell us that this was Olmsted’s original design. The grounds are so natural and so spectacular that I feel priviliged when walking around in them. What a great legacy.
The photo I sent way back was in the greenhouses he built.
Thanks for finding sharing the story.
Here in the mountains there are still people who had parents, grandparents working there during the construction. I had a friend who passed on at 94, she had been a maid there and so was her mother and grandmother.

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