

Mrs. Charles Deering (Marion Denison Whipple)
John Singer Sargent (American, 1856–1925)
1888
View the original$17
Type
Size
Secure checkout · powered by Stripe
Materials & printing
Archival matte paper, 189 g/m² (10.3 mil), sourced from Japan, printed with multicolor water-based inkjet so every brushstroke stays crisp. Framed prints arrive ready to hang in a .75″ ayous-wood frame with an acrylite front.
Shipping & returns
Made to order and shipped in 5–8 business days. US shipping only for now. Changed your mind? See our return policy.
Why is it this affordable?
A flat 20% margin — just enough to keep the store running. We only sell sizes that reproduce at full quality, and we don’t mark up the large sizes the way most shops do.
About this work
The sitter was the wife of Charles Deering, Chicago businessman, important benefactor of the Art Institute, and lifelong friend and patron of artist John Singer Sargent. In this half-length portrait, the painter depicted Marion Deering seated with her right arm resting on a chairback, her eyes engaging the viewer. Sargent rendered her face and hand with a high degree of finish, skills he had fine-tuned in the 1870s while a student in Paris. The broader handling of paint in her dress and its lace embellishments signals Sargent’s facility with the tactile and expressive possibilities of paint. Indeed, in the mid-1880s, Sargent not only worked in portraiture, but also experimented with the themes and vocabularies of Impressionism.
- Artist
- John Singer Sargent (American, 1856–1925)
- Date
- 1888
- Medium
- Oil on canvas
- Origin
- United States
- Style
- Impressionism
- Collection
- Arts of the Americas
- Reference
- 9.2002 · Art Institute of Chicago