The BlogThe Portraits of Philip de LaszloA new biography solidifies his place in the golden age of 20th-century art4:00 PM, Oct 14, 2010
• By PHILIP TERZIAN
In the world of the 20th century portrait there is John Singer Sargent, and all the rest. But first in line, just behind Sargent, is Philip de Laszlo (1869-1937), a poor Hungarian boy who rose to eminence in his own country, and in the wake of a stunning likeness of Pope Leo XII--now in the Hungarian National Gallery in Budapest. He arrived in England on the eve of World War I and became Sargent’s successor as portraitist of record for the interwar years. Between then and his death on the eve of World War II, there was no better, and no more successful or influential, portrait painter in the English-speaking world than de Laszlo. This is his first major biography since 1939, and it is as fine a depiction as the subject ever rendered. ![]() detail from 'Philip de Laszlo: His Life and Art' Philip de Laszlo: His Life and Art by Duff Hart-Davis, Yale, 412pp., $55 The Weekly Standard ArchivesBrowse 15 Years of the Weekly Standard
|