On loan to The Met The Met accepts temporary loans of art both for short-term exhibitions and for long-term display in its galleries.
Portrait of Charles Deering
John Singer Sargent American
Not on view
Charles Deering (1852–1927) was a successful Chicago businessman and entrepreneur who served as chairman of the International Harvester Company. An amateur artist who studied painting in Paris, he built an impressive art collection and was an important patron of the Art Institute of Chicago. Sargent and Deering first met in Newport, Rhode Island, in 1876. Painted more than forty years later, this informal portrait is a testimony of their lasting friendship.
In 1917, Sargent was in Florida completing a portrait of John D. Rockefeller. While there, he visited Deering at his home at Brickell Point, Miami. In this brilliant portrait, Sargent employs a loose technique to create a sympathetic portrait of his aging friend among the coconut palms, capturing the dazzling effect of sunlight on his bright white suit. Here, Sargent’s fluid handling of oil paint has the ease and apparent spontaneity of a watercolor.