Born in New Rochelle, New York, in 1873, into
a cultured, upper class family of Irish descent, Jane Erin Emmet
de Glehn was the youngest of William Jenkins Emmet and Julia
Colt Pierson Emmet's ten children. She and her equally
talented older sisters, Rosina Emmet Sherwood and Lydia Field
Emmet, all become successful artists. Her first cousin Ellen
Emmet 'Bay' Rand was also a successful artist; the
great American novelist, Henry James, was another cousin; and
the prominent playwright, Robert Emmet Sherwood, was her nephew.
She studied at the Art Students League in
New York where both William Merritt Chase and John Henry Twatchman
were teaching and then travelled to Europe to study the work
of the
Grand Masters, followed by further study in Paris. On
her return to America she met her future husband, the important
English post-Impressionist painter Wilfrid Gabriel von
Glehn, RA, who had been studying at the École des
Beaux-Arts in
Paris and was in America with John Singer Sargent, the most successful
portrait painter of his era, to assist him with the installation
of his monumental Triumph of Religion murals at the Boston
Public Library. The three became lifelong friends.
A New York Times article described
a 1902 New York exhibition of "half a hundred portraits
and townscapes by Miss Jane Erin Emmet, drawn in charcoal and
colored crayons, which give a high idea of the young artist's
power to produce a likeness with a minimum of strokes. Miss
Emmet has studied the line and knows how to be wisely economical
of color. Her
drawings of little children and babies are particularly successful;
but…prove that she can portray men of full years and middle
age with a fine strength and simplicity…She draws the
likenesses of her family and relatives and personal friends with
great skill, giving them the stamp of good breeding which is
so hard for artists to render, no matter how well favored in
that respect the sitters may be. She is a very acceptable addition
to the portrait makers of the city, and may go far in the use
of pastels, which have a richer and more painty quality than
crayons, along with the peculiar brilliancy that belongs to them”. The
article concluded, “The tendency of the Emmet family
in the present generation toward the fine arts is a very remarkable
fact. One thinks of the artist families in Europe during
the middle ages and down to the present time in Japan."
(New York Times, 18 April 1902).
Following their marriage in 1904, the couple
moved to London where they set up home in Chelsea. Jane continued
to draw and paint, largely in the mediums of chalk, pastel and
charcoal, and exhibited work at the New English Art Club,
the Royal Academy and
the Royal Hibernian Academy.
Jane and Wilfrid held an important role in Anglo-American art
circles and were friends with such prominent cultural figures
as the painters Francis 'Frank' Davis Millet and
Julian Alden Weir, architects Stanford White and Charles McKim,
the collector Isabella Stewart Gardner, and the novelists Henry
James and Edith Wharton. Between 1905 and 1914, Jane, Wilfrid
and Sargent toured much of Europe together, and America either
on their own or in the company of their artistic and literary
friends and acquaintances. The de Glehns and Sargent frequently
painted alongside each other and often depicted each other in
their work.
Following the outbreak of the First World War,
both Jane and Wilfrid joined the staff of the British Red
Cross in
France in 1915 and, in 1917, Wilfrid was commissioned in the Artists'
Rifles and
sent to the front in Italy. After the war they changed
their surname from 'von Glehn' to 'de Glehn' and
settled in England where they would spend their summers in Cornwall
and winters in France, ultimately settling in Wiltshire.
Like her sisters and cousin, Jane preferred
to work in portraiture but, unlike them and her husband, she
was not a prolific artist. After
1913 she usually shared exhibitions with her husband. During
the 1930s and 1940s she set up a studio in New York and, in 1940,
she shared an exhibition with her sister Lydia. After her
husband's death in 1951, she spent much of her time sketching
the members of her extended family and her social circle. She
died in 1961.
In 2007, the Arden Galleries in New York held an exhibition
of the work of five generations of the Emmet women's paintings.
Please feel free to forward this email to anyone you
think might be interested.
With best wishes

CHRIS NOEL-JOHNSON
ALBANY FINE ART
T: +44 (0) 1367 870961
M: +44 (0) 7799 691 692
E: chrisnj@albanyfineart.co.uk |