Top 21 Quotes & Sayings by John Singer Sargent

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American artist John Singer Sargent.
Last updated on April 14, 2025.
John Singer Sargent

John Singer Sargent was an American expatriate artist, considered the "leading portrait painter of his generation" for his evocations of Edwardian-era luxury. He created roughly 900 oil paintings and more than 2,000 watercolors, as well as countless sketches and charcoal drawings. His oeuvre documents worldwide travel, from Venice to the Tyrol, Corfu, the Middle East, Montana, Maine, and Florida.

A portrait is a painting with something wrong with the mouth.
You can't do sketches enough. Sketch everything and keep your curiosity fresh.
Mine is the horny hand of toil. — © John Singer Sargent
Mine is the horny hand of toil.
The habit of breaking up one's colour to make it brilliant dates from further back than Impressionism - Couture advocates it in a little book called 'Causeries d'Atelier' written about 1860 - it is part of the technique of Impressionism but used for quite a different reason.
It is certain that at certain times talent entirely overcomes thought or poetry.
'Impressionism' was the name given to a certain form of observation when Monet, not content with using his eyes to see what things were or what they looked like as everybody had done before him, turned his attention to noting what took place on his own retina (as an oculist would test his own vision).
I do not judge, I only chronicle.
Every time I paint a portrait I lose a friend.
A person with normal eyesight would have nothing to know in the way of 'Impressionism' unless he were in a blinding light or in the dusk or dark.
Color is an inborn gift, but appreciation of value is merely training of the eye, which everyone ought to be able to acquire.
I hate to paint portraits! I hope never to paint another portrait in my life. Portraiture may be all right for a man in his youth, but after forty I believe that manual dexterity deserts one, and, besides, the color-sense is less acute. Youth can better stand the exactions of a personal kind that are inseparable from portraiture. I have had enough of it.
Impressionism' was the name given to a certain form of observation when Monet, not content with using his eyes to see what things were or what they looked like as everybody had done before him, turned his attention to noting what took place on his own retina (as an oculist would test his own vision).
Cultivate an ever continuous power of observation. Wherever you are, be always ready to make slight notes of postures, groups and incidents. Store up in the mind... a continuous stream of observations from which to make selections later. Above all things get abroad, see the sunlight and everything that is to be seen.
If you begin with the middle-tone and work up from it toward the darks so that you deal last with your highest lights and darkest darks, you avoid false accents.
Make the best of an emergency.
A portrait is a picture in which there is just a tiny little something not quite right about the mouth.
An artist painting a picture should have at his side a man with a club to hit him over the head when the picture is finished.
I don't dig beneath the surface for things that don't appear before my own eyes.
The thicker you paint, the more it flows. — © John Singer Sargent
The thicker you paint, the more it flows.
Cultivate an ever-continuous power of observation. Wherever you are, be always ready to make slight notes of postures, groups and incidents.
No small dabs of colour - you want plenty of paint to paint with.
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