Workmen at Carrara - John Singer Sargent

Workmen at Carrara - John Singer Sargent
Olivia Shaler Swan Memorial Collection
"Workmen at Carrara" by John Singer Sargent (1911) Watercolor with touches of opaque watercolor and scraping over graphite on ivory wove paper.

Commentary

Commentary

"Workmen at Carrara" by John Singer Sargent (1911) invites a close look at how form and feeling work together. Its painted surface guides your eye through color, brushwork, and contrast rather than through narrative alone. Themes to not ice include Impressionism, watercolor. This piece is held in the source collection's Prints and Drawings collection. John Singer Sargent is the artist behind this work. A useful anchor for reading the piece: John Singer Sargent American, 1856-1925. The work is cataloged within a United States cultural context. It is associated with the Impressionism period. How to look at this work: It is cataloged as watercolor, which gives a clue to how the museum frames the object. Its medium (Watercolor with touches of opaque watercolor and scraping over graphite on ivory wove paper) affects texture, durability, and how detail reads at different distances. Its listed dimensions (40.4 × 53.4 cm (15 15/16 × 21 1/16 in.)) suggest how intimate or monumental it may feel in person. Subject cues from the catalog include Impressionism, watercolor. Compare this reading with the museum record at the source collection: https://www.artic.edu/artworks/14796