John Singer Sargent, La Carmencita Dancing (detail), 1890. Oil on canvas, Overall: 54 x 35 in. (137.16 x 88.9 cm), Framed: 64 1/2 x 46 7/8 in. (163.83 x 119.063 cm). Private Collection
Around 1916, Sargent gave his friend Isabella Stewart Gardner the 22 flamenco records digitized here. He wrote to her expressing strong preferences for certain singers and types of songs in a particular sales catalogue, and urged her to consider only “flamenco songs and not the rubbish that the catalogue is full of.” Gardner noted her own opinions on the labels of the albums Sargent gave her, classifying them as “good” or “bad.” All music courtesy of the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston.
Sargent and Spain is on view at the Legion of Honor from February 11 through May 14, 2023.
Tagged with
Latest stories
-
The Etruscans, the Ancient World’s Greatest Untold Story
Meet the extraordinary ancient culture history forgot.
-
The Surprising Independence of Etruscan Women
Meet the most modern and independent women of the ancient world.
(3 min. read)By Lisa Pieraccini and Alexandra Carpino, art historians
-
In a Creative Rut? Monet and Bay Area Artists on Finding Inspiration
From a trip to Venice to a backyard BBQ to rapping in gibberish — you never know where inspiration will strike.
(3 min. read)By Arleene Correa Valencia, Frak The Person, and Nora Lalle