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Havard Magazine 2008 titled Sarah Wyman Whitman
VITA
Sarah Wyman Whitman
Brieflif of a determined artist: 1842-1904
by BETTY S. SMITH
S
ARAH WYMAN WHITMAN was an original and compelling
produced book covers a sense of simple elegance through line,
figure in late nineteenth century Boston Very much a pub-
color, and lettering. Many of the authors were her friends, includ-
lic personality, she was a painter, a designer of book covers
ing Sarah Orne Jewett, James Russell Lowell, and Oliver Wendell
and stained glass, an interior decorator, an author, poet, teacher.
Holmes. In 20 years, Whitman designed well over 200 books, fre-
The notes she wrote with a quill pen, her style of dress-ostrich
quently incorporating her design signature, a "flaming heart."
feathers, beaver bonnets, exuberant shades of silk and satin, un-
This work paralleled her career as a designer and creator of
usual gems-even her exalted manner of speaking (to hide a slight
stained glass. The artist John La Farge, who asked her to create a
impediment) reflected the ways she had joined her art and her life.
carpet design as part of his commission to decorate H. H.
Although descended from prominent New England families,
Richardson's newly completed Trinity Church in Boston, was a
she spent her early childhood in Baltimore among her Wyman rel-
primary influence; her first stained-glass commission, in 1884-85,
atives, in a cultivated and philanthropic environment she trea-
for the Central Congregational Church in Worcester, Massachu-
sured all her life. When she returned to Lowell, Massachusetts, at
setts, was probably due to his recommendation She designed 100
11, she was educated at home; a gifted tutor shaped her lifelong
windows for Berwick Academy in Maine (Sarah Orne Jewett's
dedication to learning A friend of her later years, Henry Lee Hig
alma mater), the Phillips Brooks Memorial Window in the Trinity
ginson, founder of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, once ob-
Church parish house, and many smaller commissions for churches
served that Whitman "was bent on self-cultivation in order that
stretching from New York City to Albany, and along the New
she might better do the work of her life as she had laid it out."
England coast from the North Shore to Cranberry Island, Maine.
Her plans began to take shape two years after she exchanged
For Harvard's Memorial Hall she designed both the elaborate
the dullness of Lowell for the dullness of a long marriage to
south transept window and the Honor and Peace window on the
Boston wool merchant Henry Whitman. With their move to Bea-
south side of what is now Annenberg Hall.
con Hill, she gained access to the wider world of the Boston elite:
Meanwhile, she continued to draw together people she admired,
artists, writers, and educators. In 1868, she entered the studio of
subtly entwining friendship and patronage, welcoming visitors to
the socially prominent and successful artist William Morris
enjoy her "all-embracing hospitality" at her city and country
Hunt, who had recently begun to welcome women as students.
homes and her studios on Boylston Street (the Lily Glass Works)
Her professional training was astonishingly brief. She studied
and Mount Vernon Street She exhibited her paintings and lec-
with Hunt for three winters, studied drawing with his colleague
tured occasionally. She taught women's Bible classes for 30 years, in
William Rimmer, and twice-in 1877 and late 1878 or early 1879-
winter at Trinity Church, in summer on the North Shore. She de-
went to France to study with Hunt's former master, Thomas Cou-
voted time and money to innovative educational institutions,
ture. Although she lacked "just one year in the Academy," consid-
among them Tuskegee Institute, Berea College, and the "Harvard
ered a prerequisite for a successful career, she determined to move
Annex," the new women's college in Cambridge, whose president
forward. In a letter to a patron, she described her "plan of life" as
was her close friend Elizabeth Cary Agassiz. Fittingly, her last
balancing a successful professional career amidst her obligations
works in glass-the panels Courage, Love, and Patience created for the
"as a householder," her philanthropic interests, and her position in
1904 St. Louis Exposition-are now installed in the Radcliffe Col-
society. Even she admitted it was a "strange complex web" of a life.
lege Room of the Radcliffe Institute's Schlesinger Library.
By 1881, one critic already judged her "as representative of suc-
Although Whitman's last years were marred by illness, the re-
cessful women-painters in Boston." But she did not limit herself to
sult of overwork, she continued to create at a lessened pace. Her
accepted feminine subjects: portraiture, still lifes, and landscapes.
death was deeply mourned. William James wrote to his brother,
She turned to the field of design, an approach-encouraged by
Henry, "She leaves a dreadful vacuum in Boston and the same
Couture, echoed in the English Arts and Crafts Movement, and ac-
world is here-but without her to bear witness."
tively supported by her mentor and benefactor, Harvard professor
Charles Eliot Norton-that viewed art and life as inseparable. In
Betty S. Smith, CAS '78, is a professional researcher.
the 188os she began to produce a steady stream of designs for book
covers, stained glass, and interiors.
Opposite: This posthumous portrait of Whitman by her friend Helen Merriman
She became the first professional woman artist regularly em-
hangs in the Radcliffe College Room of the Schlesinger Library. The leaves in
ployed by Boston publisher Houghton Mifflin to give their mass-
Whitman's bodice may be laurel, symbols of victory and of artistic achievement
32
JANUARY FEBRUARY 2008
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Havard Magazine 2008 titled Sarah Wyman Whitman
Magazine Article. Havard Magazine, page 32 dated January-February 2008 titled "Sarah Wyman Whitman by Betty S. Smith- Brief life of a determined artist: 1842-1904". Associated with item 1578a, page 33 -which is a picture of Sarah Wyman Whitman.