Eakins Goes to Paris
Athletic and artistically inclined, and effiminate with a woman-like voice by some accounts, Thomas Eakins, the son of calligrapher, Benjamin Eakins, displayed a propensity for mechanical drawing in high school where he, incidentally, met future landscape painter and lifelong friend, Charles Lewis Fussell (1840-1909). Following high school, the two would study at Philadelphia's Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, beginning in 1861. Additionally, Eakins enrolled in anatomy classes at Jefferson Medical College where he furthered his understanding of the human body by attending lectures and participating in the dissection of cadavers. While a career in the medical field merited his consideration for a season, he ultimately stayed true to his artistic calling.
From 1866 to 1870, Eakins studied art in Europe, first with academist painter and sculptor Jean-Léon Gérôme (1824-1904) at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, then with realist painter Léon Bonnat (1833-1922), before moving on to Spain where he found the work of the important Spanish Golden Age figure, Diego Rodriguez de Silva y Velázquez (1599-1660), particularly refreshing.
Eakins' time in Paris had opened his eyes to a Bohemian milieu in which great artists, writers and cantankerous expatriates would soon flourish during a period known as La Belle Époque. He was hardly impressed with the works of Édouard Monet (1832-1883) or Edgar Degas (1834-1917), whose new style of painting would not be called impressionism until 1874. Eakins would have surely encountered brazen homosexuality among the liberally-minded Parisians. For those who contend that he was a closeted homosexual or, at the very least, bisexual, there is some speculation regarding his sexual explorations during this time period. As an art student, he had viewed the female form from the vantage point of devoted artist, but expressed a fervent desire to work with the male form as explained in a letter (although hardly a confession of homosexual longing) to his father:
She is the most beautiful thing there is in the world except a naked man, but I never yet saw a study of one exhibited...(Homer, 1992)
Prior to departing for Paris in 1866, Eakins had been romantically involved with budding painter and engraver Emily Sartain (1841-1927), the sister to his good friend, William Sartain (1843-1924), a future orientalist and portraitist. (The Sartain siblings were from a great artistic dynasty.) While the years of separation led to the demise of his relationship with Emily, Eakins was joined by William in March 1869. The two shared Eakins' studio space and studied at the atelier of Bonnat. Soon thereafter, Eakins felt confident that he had sufficiently learned the fundamentals of realism and was ready to seriously embark on his artistic career back home in the USA.
When Eakins arrived in Philadelphia on July 4, 1870, his career soon began in earnest. Eakins' father would eventually provide his son with a fourth-floor studio addition to the Eakins family residence at 1729 Mount Vernon Street.
Stunning Revelations and Accusations
Thomas Eakins' early works included various portraits, rowing scenes, including Max Schmitt in a Single Scull (1871), and the monumental painting, The Gross Clinic (1875), a shockingly realistic portrayal of the famous surgeon, Dr. Samuel D. Gross (1805-1884), at work in the surgical theater. One of the greatest American paintings of the nineteenth century, The Gross Clinic sold for $68 million in 2006.
In 1879, Eakins joined the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, as an assistant to Christian Schuessele (1824-1879), who was failing in health and serving as professor in name only. Eakins basically revamped the curriculum in Schuessele's absence and worked without compensation while Schuessele continued to receive much-needed income from the school.
Following Schuessele's death, Eakins was named Professor of Drawing and Painting in August 1879 and became the director of the Academy in 1882. Right away, he disregarded some long-standing rules, including those prohibiting the use of students as nude models. In an era in which women wore full-skirted dresses, it must have seemed outrageous that a male model might be asked to pose in women's life classes. Nonetheless, Eakins tredged on, having students pose for his own works, posing both male and female students for his Naked Series of photographs and even exposing himself to a female student under the auspices of showing pelvic movment.
Eakins, no doubt, crossed any number of lines, but his openness to working with nudes proved trendsetting. In a piece for Antiques & Fine Art Magazine, Dr. Cynthia Roznoy wrote, "Eakins' efforts shifted the whole of art teaching in America; by the turn-of-the-century life classes were sanctioned and the male nude emerged from his classical guise to be seen as a contemporary subject" (2012, 152-157).
At the age of forty, Eakins married twenty-five-year-old Susan Hannah Macdowell (1851-1938), and their marriage would conspicuously remain a childless one. The two had met at the Hazeltine Gallery in 1876 during an exhibition of The Gross Clinic. Macdowell had been intrigued by the controversial painting and went on to study with Eakins at the Academy where she became a proponent of including women in life-drawing classes in which the models were nude.
In 1886, Eakins was forced to resign from the Academy after he removed the loincloth of a male model in a classroom where female students were present. Though initially reprimanded by the Academy for violating policy, Eakins and the Academy faced a flurry of accusations, and Eakins was abruptly ousted by the board of directors.
Had his completion of Swimming one year earlier set the wheels in motion for Eakins' enemies to force him out? A commission, Swimming was promptly rejected by Edward H. Coates (1846-1921), chairman of the Academy's Committee on Instruction, who did not deem it appropriate to be included in the school's permanent collection. Alternatively, Coates traded it for The Pathetic Song (1881).
Had opposition to Eakins' teaching methods -- or more accurately, toward the artist himself -- been building all along and the "loincloth scandal" was merely the crescendo to a furiously reverberating aria that could only reach its climax with Eakins' removal from the Academy? Swimming had certainly caused a stir, given that all of its subjects -- namely art critic Talcott Williams (reclining on the rocks), students Benjamin Fox (the redheaded young man in the water), John Laurie Wallace (kneeling on the rocks), Jessie Godley (the standing figure), George Reynolds (who is diving into the water), Eakins' setter, Harry, and, of course, Eakins himself -- were easily identifiable.
While many consider Swimming to be a masterpiece, a celebration of male beauty, harkening to halcyon days of simpler times when male swimmers typically frolicked in the nude, it goes without saying that in recent years critics have symbolically likened Eakins to a hungry predator stealthily gliding as if undetected through the placid waters of Bryn Mawr's Dove Lake in pursuit of his unsuspecting victims.
Whether this metaphor accurately described Eakins and his relationship with students, it can be said that neither Williams nor the young men appear as victims in Swimming or the array of photographs taken as reference material. However, the painting arguably points to inappropriate conduct between a professor and his students.