Thursday, May 14, 2026

Frederick Carl Frieseke: Sadie

"Girl Dressing Her Hair"
by Frederick Carl Frieseke
"By this time Frederick Carl Frieseke had met the young woman who was to become his wife. Sarah Anne O'Bryan of Pittsburgh, known as Sadie, was the daughter of John Duross O'Bryan, an American jurist who had made and lost a series of fortunes in speculative ventures in the American West. O'Bryan was in the habit of bringing his wife and members of his large family to Paris from time to time, and in the late 1890s he still had two daughters to 'finish,' Sadie and her younger sister Janet. Sadie, highly intelligent, vivid, and variously talented, was subject to parents who never would have smiled upon educating her for a serious career. In Paris she studied drawing and painting as well as voice and cello. She and Frieseke met in Paris soon after his arrival. Their mutual attraction was speedy. Very early on they had agreed to a sort of provisional engagement, which was thwarted, however, by Sadie's father, who was opposed to the idea of his daughter marrying an artist.

Despite the regular income from Wanamaker's Frieseke was poor. His living and studio space was probably as cheap as could be found in the outskirts of Montparnasse. Henry Ossawa Tanner, who managed to live in very straightened circumstances, had space in the same building. Tanner was his senior by fifteen years and also an habitué of the American Art Association. The two became lifelong friends. In the neighboring spaces were the Australian painters James MacDonald, Ambrose Patterson, and Hugh Ramsay. The young men did much in common, shared meals and information, traveled together, and both criticized and borrowed from each other's work. They shared models as well, thus spreading the cost, and were on hand to cheer or bait one another."

(Excerpts from "Frederick Carl Frieseke: A Biography by Nicholas Kilmer" in Frederick Carl Frieseke: The Evolution of an American Impressionist"published on the occasion of an exhibition of Frieseke's work.)    

 

 

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