Madame X, an oil portrait by American artist
John Singer Sargent, portrays the cool, patrician hauteur
of a wife of a wealthy man who herself
came up from nothing.
Her face reflects uncertainty
as if she can only spare but moment for the portrait
and must leave soon. She leans nonchalantly
on a single, round wooden table. The background
is without ornamentation or drape.
Her arm is painted suggestively in a shapely, sinuous line,
a flow mirrored by her tiny waist and hourglass form.
Her black satin gown with fitted pleats and folds
Enhances her hips, with a heart shaped neckline
Of black velvet plunged daringly low for the period,
highlighting her milky white skin. The tiny gold and pearl
shoulder straps subtley represent her fragility.
Even her auburn hair is simple and unadorned. It is worn up,
but close to her head, and it appears to have been cut.
Curls sneak out along her neckline.
No lush Victorian pompadours or jewels or diamond tiaras
Distract from her beauty. She is a young mother,
wishing she could be with her children. Perhaps her head
is turned so she can hear them better, but perhaps
it is a small vanity to show off her lovely profile.