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Mariette Leslie Cotton

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Mariette Leslie Cotton
Photographic portrait of Mariette Leslie Cotton taken by the Bain News Service (New York), circa 1900
Cotton, circa 1900
Born
Mariette Benedict

(1866-05-17)May 17, 1866
DiedApril 21, 1947(1947-04-21) (aged 80)
NationalityAmerican
Known forArtist
SpouseJoseph Leslie Cotton

Mariette Leslie Cotton (1866–1947) was an American artist who usually gave her name as Mrs. Leslie Cotton. A student of William Merritt Chase, Carolus-Duran, and Jean-Jacques Henner, she worked mainly in Paris but also maintained studios in London and New York. By birth and marriage she possessed a level of wealth and social prestige that, together with her artistic skill, enabled her to obtain lucrative commissions from prominent individuals. The portraits she painted were praised for their veracity, style, and fine technique. Their subjects included kings, aristocrats, celebrities, and members of wealthy families. Late in her career a critic wrote that her "popularity has a sound basis, for her portraits combine such abstract artistic qualities as effective and infinitely varied design and daringly unconventional arrangements of color, with strong characterization and a likeness that never fails to be convincing," and added, "her concern with the artistic problem never makes her obtrude her own personality or offend the sitter's susceptibilities."[1]

Early life

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"Lady in Black" (Portrait of Mariette Leslie Cotton at age nineteen) by William Merritt Chase (1888, oil on canvas, 74 1/4 x 36 5/16 inches)

Cotton was born on May 17, 1866 in Schenectady, New York.[2][3] Her birth name was Mariette Benedict and until she was twenty she was generally known as "Pansy Benedict".[4][5]

Her early training appears to have come from her mother, a woman who was considered to be talented both as artist and singer[6] and she may also have received informal training from an art instructor at the college where her parents had their home.[6][note 1] However she came by it, Cotton's talent was such that she was considered to be an accomplished amateur artist before she was twenty.[5]

In 1888, newly married and having moved to Manhattan from her parents' home, Cotton sought to become a student of William Merritt Chase.[8] He agreed to teach her and at the same time asked whether she would sit for a portrait. In 1908 Chase described the meeting: "One morning a young lady came into my Tenth street studio, just as I was leaving for an art class in Brooklyn. She came as a pupil, but the moment she appeared before me I saw her only as a splendid model. Half way to the elevated station I stopped, hastened back, and overtook her. She consented to sit for me; and I painted that day, without an interruption, till late in the evening. The result is the Lady in Black, now hung in the Metropolitan Museum."[9][note 2]

In 1889, a second Chase portrait of her, "Lady in Pink", was shown at the Spring Exhibition at the National Academy of Design in New York.[11][note 3]

Career

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In the early months of that year Cotton and her husband sailed for Europe.[15] In leaving his position in a New York firm of importers, he indicated that the couple intended to live abroad permanently.[16] Not long after their arrival Cotton began study in a Parisian studio run by the portraitists, Carolus-Duran and Jean-Jacques Henner, who were known for taking on women students, particularly Anglo-Americans.[17][note 4]

Early portrait work

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1891

A remarkable debut in London is made by a young American artist of great promise, Mrs. Mariette Cotton, who has evidently acquired from her master, M. Carolus-Duran, many of the secrets of his powerful palette, and with them his felicity in the simple and direct presentation of a subject. ... Her standpoint is as yet very naturally ultra-French; and, after the fashion of many of her most accomplished fellow countrymen, she too strongly tinges with this acquired colour the personality of her sitters. But if she can retain the technical mastery thus early achieved in the French atelier, while more fully developing her own artistic individuality, she will be able to accomplish great things.[20]

From an unsigned article in The Academy magazine, 6 June 1891
Portrait of Henry Keteltas by Mariette Leslie Cotton (1883-1884, oil on canvas, 60 1/4 x 37 1/4 inches)

In 1889 a painting of Cotton's, "Portrait of Miss S.," was accepted for exhibition at the Paris Salon of that year and proved to be the only painting by an American artist to receive an award.[21][22][note 5] In 1891 she showed two portraits—a pastel, "Mrs. Mahlon Sands," and an oil, "F. T. Martin, Esq."—at the annual exhibition at London's Royal Academy.[24][note 6] A review of the 1891 exhibition in Art Journal called the portraits "meritorious performances" and a review in The Royal Academy gave a more extensive evaluation, praising her "technical mastery" in an "ultra-French style" and looking forward to her development of an artistic individuality.[20][26]

By 1895 Cotton had become known for portraits she had made of prominent European men including the Duke of Cambridge and Otto von Bismarck.[27] Early that year paintings of two men to whom she had social and family connections appeared at Knoedler's Galleries in New York. One showed her husband's friend, Samuel M. Roosevelt and the other showed Howard Potter to whom Cotton was related via her husband's first marriage.[note 7] Later in the year five portraits by Cotton appeared in a loan exhibition to aid two local charities.[32][note 8] A critic for The Sun singled out "Miss E. Winslow" as the best of the group, saying the portrait contained a "dignity and distinction quite apart from any charm of feature or expression." The critic also defended the dignity conveyed in two other portraits which the critic said had been unfairly criticized as "unnecessarily realistic in regard to the ravages of time."[33] Of the self-portrait a society writer said a viewer at the exhibition would be astonished because the "smiling, young, modish society woman, seemingly coming out of the frame with outstretched hand to greet you, looked too much the woman of fashion to be the hard working artist."[34][note 9]

In the fall of the following year Cotton showed a self-portrait and portraits of two wealthy New Yorkers at Knoedler's. The sitters were William Seward Webb and James L. Breese.[note 10] Writing in The Sun, a critic said the paintings were made "in a vigorous style unusual in a woman"[42] and another, in the New York Times, saw the portraits as having minor defects but nonetheless showing "much promise and unusual cleverness."[43] The New York Times critic associated Cotton's style with John Singer Sargent's, calling him her "master." The Times critic did not explain why he thought Cotton to be a follower of Sargent, but a few years later another critic noted that Cotton had received advice and criticism from him.[44] [note 11]

Mature style

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"Louisa Archer Thornton" by Mariette Leslie Cotton (1905, oil on canvas)
"Brayton C. Ives" by Mariette Leslie Cotton (1907, oil on canvas, 50 x 40 inches)
"Lady Mendl infirmiere pendant la guerre" by Mariette Leslie Cotton (circa 1918, oil on canvas, 30 x 23 inches)
Portrait of Col. William Wright Harts by Mariette Leslie Cotton (oil on canvas)

In 1900 Cotton showed five portraits at Knoedler's. The exhibition attracted the attention of critics who praised her versatility and evident sympathy with her sitters as well as the "dash and spirit" of her style.[48][49] Her relationship with Knoedler's continued with exhibitions every few years from 1901 through 1921. Critics liked the 1901 show, one praising improvement in her work.[50][note 12] When twenty-one portraits appeared at Knoedler's in 1904, reviewers praised her character research, directness and simplicity, and clever brushwork.[53] One of them also noted her "ability to secure a good likeness, much power of characterization, and as a rule good drawing and effective color."[54] A reviewer also noted an unevenness in the show, some portraits giving evidence of having been rushed or given only perfunctory attention.[53][note 13] In 1906 Cotton was seen to have "a brilliant career before her,"[44] already earning enough from commissioned portraits to support herself and her family.[56] By this time her sitters were increasingly from European countries, many of them titled. Two of these were women who had befriended Cotton, Lady Cunard and Lady Savile.[44][57] Lady Bache Cunard was the former Maude Alice Burke, an American from a wealthy New York family. She had married an English baronet named Bache Edward Cunard who was a grandson of the founder of the Cunard Line. Prominent in London social circles, she was a noted promoter of literary and artistic careers.[58] Gertrude Lady Savile, who was raised in a well-connected English family, developed strong ties in the United States after she married a man who had a diplomatic appointment at the British embassy in Washington, D.C. During her stay in the country she became "the toast of the town not only in the national capital, but also in New York."[59] After her first husband's untimely death, she married another diplomat, John Savile, who, on the death of a childless uncle, also named John Savile, inherited a title, 2nd Baron Savile, and much wealth.[59] Like Lady Cunard, Lady Savile was a highly respected London society matron.[60] Acting somewhat in competition with each other, the two women worked to advance Cotton's career in London.[61] With their help she was able to obtain commissions from a growing list of titled English sitters including Lord Howard de Walden; the daughter of a duke, Lady Marjorie Manners; and a Lady in Waiting to the Queen, the Honorable Violet Vivian.[62] While in Marienbad during the summer of 1907, Cotton began work on a portrait of an English socialite named Mrs. Hall Walker.[63] A close friend of Edward VII, Walker provided Cotton with an introduction that resulted in a request from the king that she paint his portrait as well.[64][65] Mrs. Hall Walker, later Baroness Wavertree, was a popular hostess seen as liking to surround herself with beautiful women such as Cotton.[66] Begun in Marienbad, the portrait was completed the following winter at Cotton's London studio.[note 14] When the portrait was shown in an exhibition at Knoedler's later that year, a critic praised an innovative informality of clothing and pose which revealed the king's amiability without compromising his dignity.[68] The portrait pleased him so much that he commissioned another, more formal, portrait of himself and one of the queen.[62][65] Early in 1914, Cotton brought some of her London portraits to New York for exhibition at Knoedler's eliciting this concise evaluation from a critic for the Brooklyn Daily Eagle: "There is little doubt of the talent of Mrs. Leslie Cotton, who shows portraits in oil, in the upper gallery at Knoedler's, for she paints with conviction, with much feeling and with convincing result."[69]

From the time of her marriage through the 1920s Cotton lived mainly in London and Paris, making frequent visits to New York. She showed her work infrequently in New York galleries, instead inviting acquaintances to her studio to see recently completed portraits and ones still in progress. These events, usually afternoon teas, became popular among the social set in which she moved.[note 15] On the occasions that she did show her work in New York galleries the exhibitions were widely reported in the press. For example, when in 1917 she showed fifteen portraits she had made in Paris over the previous few years, the exhibition attracted notice from the New York Herald, the Christian Science Monitor, the Sun, the Schenectady Gazette, American Art News, and the Fine Arts Journal. Reviewers praised the show in general, saw some unevenness in the quality of her work, and were impressed with both the social standing and attractiveness of her sitters.[note 16] One influential critic, Henry McBride, said "Mrs. Cotton realizes her personages for us so vividly that one is tempted to run off into personal gossip rather than to thread the tedious intricacies of a discussion of artistic technique."[76] During the years when she made her home abroad Cotton had paintings accepted for exhibition in the annual Paris Salons. Her appearances were infrequent early in her career and nearly annual during the 1920s.[note 17]

1926

Mrs. Cotton, who works in Paris, appears to enjoy an enviable degree of popularity, if one may judge from the formidable array of distinguished sitters who have passed through her studio. ... The painter's popularity has a sound basis, for her portraits combine such abstract artistic qualities as effective and infinitely varied design and daringly unconventional arrangements of color, with strong characterization and a likeness that never fails to be convincing. Her concern with the artistic problem never makes her obtrude her own personality or offend the sitter's susceptibilities.[1]

P. G. Konody, writing in the New York Times, 12 December 1926

Throughout her career Cotton moved about frequently and had no permanent or even long-term studio. She sometimes worked in hotel rooms and occasionally stayed in a private home as the guest of one of her sitters. During the winter of 1902-1903 she painted Mrs. Henry Flagler at her home in Palm Beach.[93] In August 1903 she stayed with one of her sitters, Mrs. William B. Leeds, as her guest in Bar Harbor on the Leeds's yacht and by December of that year she had a studio in New York that was likened to a drawing room complete with luxurious old tapestries.[71][93] A year later she was painting in a studio within an apartment hotel, the Schuyler, on West 45th Street.[94] In 1906 she occupied rooms in a London townhouse owned by her friend, Lady Savile.[61] The following summer, when she began work on her portrait of King Edward, she had a studio in Marienbad and while completing that portrait during the winter months she was occupying a studio on Tite Street in Chelsea that had formerly been used by James McNeill Whistler.[62][68] In 1913 her she had another London studio, this one on Devonshire Street, and two years later, in the midst of World War I, she was working in Paris.[95][96] Returning to the United States in 1916, she painted portraits in private houses and had no studio.[96] During the 1920s she worked mainly in Paris studios and thereafter, until the end of her life, mainly in New York.[1][3]

The society woman as professional artist

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During the time that Cotton was establishing herself as a professional artist reporters found it odd that an influential society woman would, as one of them said, challenge the successful male portraitists such as Sargent or George Burroughs Torrey.[45] Another showed surprise that a woman would prefer to be better known as artist than as hostess.[97] A third saw her as a type of new woman such as Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, Edith Wharton, Emily Post, and other successful women in American literature and the arts.[56] As a fourth put it, "The true American society woman does not think millions an excuse for idleness."[98] A fifth echoed this sentiment and elaborated: "In the circles of great wealth are a dozen women who are doing meritorious work with brush, pen, and chisel. And they are professionals in the fullest sense of the word. ... In every case they are professionals because they wish to be tested on the broadest basis of merit. Hence they put their work side by side with the product of those who make their living in such ways and let the purchaser decide which is the most meritorious."[99]

Throughout her career critics noted Cotton's popularity with the public and her success in gaining prestigious commissions. They found much to like in many of her portraits but some complained of unevenness in her output and even sloppy handling.[53][78] In 1917 a reviewer said, "Mrs. Cotton is a disappointing painter in that her work varies so greatly, some of it unusually good, and some of it so weak as to make it difficult to understand how it could proceed from the same brush."[78] In 1926 another reviewer attributed at least some of this variability to a necessary compromise. As a professional portraitist she was obliged to please her subjects. This meant that at least some of the time she had to balance her desire to create good art with the sitter's desire to be presented in a certain way. The reviewer suggested that Cotton's best work was made when she painted "for her own pleasure" and was not forced to make this compromise.[1]

After she turned sixty years old, Cotton rarely showed her work and attracted little notice from the press. She attended the occasional social function, including a function at the White House at the invitation of Eleanor Roosevelt in 1940, but seems to have remained quietly in New York during the last years of her life.[3][100]

Personal life

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At the time of her birth Cotton's family lived on the campus of Union College. Although both her parents had ties to it, neither worked at the school. Her father, Samuel Tweedy Benedict, had entered as a freshman in 1856 and graduated in 1860.[101] He went on to become a lawyer and state legislator.[102] Her mother, Julia Averill Jackson Benedict, was a daughter of Isaac Jackson, who had taught at the college and who, by living with them after his retirement, helped assure that they were welcome to make their home there.[6] Sources vary as to the year of her birth. They give May 17 as month and day, but some give 1866 as year and others give 1868. The sources most likely to be accurate give the former.[note 18] Cotton received at least part of her early education at home from a governess.[4]

As noted above, Cotton may have received early art training from her mother and a Union College art teacher. When she was twenty Cotton married a man who had connections both to her family and to Union College. Her husband was Joseph Leslie Cotton whose connection to Cotton and Union College came via his first marriage to Maria Louisa Potter who had died in childbirth six years before.[30][105] She was the granddaughter of Alonzo Potter, a Union College vice president, and Sarah Maria Nott Potter, daughter of the school's president.[7][note 19][note 20] Cotton was herself related to the Potter family, although the relationship was apparently a distant one.[note 21] Cotton was seen to have an attractive personality and appearance. Shortly after her marriage a reporter called attention to her beauty and some years later she was included among the women featured in An American Book of Beauty (New York, Harper & Bros., 1904).[27][107] In 1903[45] and again in 1907 she was credited with great charm of manner.[108]

Cotton's husband, Joseph Leslie Cotton, was born in Barbados in 1856 to Dudley Page Cotton and Rebecca Jane Roach Cotton.[109] Dudley P. Cotton was a successful merchant, trading in the West Indies, who belonged to a wealthy and well connected family based originally in New Hampshire.[110][note 22] At the time of his first marriage J. Leslie Cotton had lived in Boston and managed a ranch in Wyoming Territory.[114] By the time he married Cotton in 1888 he had joined with two friends in a New York firm that imported wine and spirits from Europe.[note 23] He left the firm when he and Cotton, then married, decided to live abroad.[16] The couple's wealth together with Cotton's gift for social advancement enabled them to gain acceptance within the British aristocracy and a few years after their arrival in London they were granted the privilege of a presentation to the Court at Buckingham Palace.[39] While living in both Paris and London they were known for the "entertainments" they hosted.[116] In 1893, while staying in London, their first and only child was born, a son named Hugh Dudley Benedict Cotton.[117] By 1901 J. Leslie Cotton had re-established himself in New York and was working as an architect.[118][note 24] Cotton continued to reside mainly abroad and during her visits to the United States the society press would make note of events that the two of them attended together.[120] Increasingly, however, their social activities would be reported separately and in 1916 it was apparent that they were separated when they both attended a performance at the Metropolitan Opera yet sat in separate boxes.[121] When their son married in New York in 1920 a New York address was given for his father and his mother was listed as "Mrs. Cotton of Paris."[122] By 1921 they had divorced[2] and at J. Leslie Cotton's death in 1929 the New York Times obituary listed survivors but made no mention of Cotton as former wife.[123]

Other names

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Cotton generally used Mrs. Leslie Cotton as her professional name, but early in her career she was called (in France) Mlle. M. Cotton[22] and Miss or Mrs. Mariette Cotton (in the United States).[21][26] After her divorce she sometimes used Mariette Leslie Cotton or Mariette Cotton.[88][124]

Apart from professional use, the names used for her include the following:

  • Miss Mariette Benedict, her maiden name, sometimes given as Miss Marietta Benedict.[4][107]
  • Pansy Benedict, her nickname.[5]
  • Mrs. Leslie-Cotton.[100]
  • Mrs. Marietta Leslie Cotton.[82]
  • Marietta Benedict Cotton.[8]

Portraits

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A list of people who were well known among their contemporaries for whom Cotton made portraits.[note 25]

Notes

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  1. ^ The art instructor was William Appleton Potter, a relative of Cotton's who taught at Union College during her childhood.[6] Her father, Samuel Tweedy Benedict, also taught at the college and the family lived on campus.[3][7]
  2. ^ Painted in 1888, "Lady in Black" was well known and highly regarded during Chase's lifetime and remains so today. In 1891 he donated it to the Metropolitan Museum of Art which still displays it.[10]
  3. ^ "Lady in Pink" appeared as the first illustration in the catalog of the Academy exhibition and received a favorable review in the issue of Art Amateur for May 1889.[11][12] Purchased from him in 1893, it was donated to the museum of the Rhode Island School of Design as the first of the museum's possessions.[13][14]
  4. ^ In 1874 Carlos-Duran and Henner had founded what the latter called "l'Atelier des Dames," a studio reserved for teaching aspiring women artists.[18] Both were known for their rejection of the academic realism then popular in portraiture in favor of a freer style. They were also known for the influence of Diego Velázquez on their work.[17][19]
  5. ^ The Paris Salon was an annual exhibition produced at that time by the Société des artistes français The award was an honorable mention.[21] The identity of the sitter, "Miss S." is not given in contemporary or later accounts. It is possible that she was Ethel Sands whose mother Cotton painted in a portrait, "Mrs. Mahlon Sands," exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1891. Cotton may have been introduced to her parents by their close friend and her relative, Frederick Townsend Martin.[23] At the time Cotton made the portrait of Miss S. she was twenty-one years old and Ethel Sands was seventeen. Cotton was then training to be a professional artist and Ethel Sands aspired to be one.
  6. ^ Mrs. Mahlon Sands was a close friend of Frederick Townsend Martin. Both were socially-prominent Americans, she permanently residing in London with her husband and three children, and he traveling widely with many connections in England. In his memoir, Things I Remember (1913), he wrote that she and her husband were among his greatest friends. Mrs. Sands, he said, "was a beautiful woman who possessed a great power of attraction, and the late King [i.e., Edward VII], then Prince of Wales, liked her and her husband and honored them with many proofs of his friendship."[25]
  7. ^ Samuel Montgomery Roosevelt was a merchant and artist. In partnership first with Louis M. Howland and subsequently with Montgomery Roosevelt Schuyler (to whom, as the names suggest, he was related), he ran a wine importing and commission agent business in New York.[28] In August 1888 Cotton's husband, J. Leslie Cotton, joined the partnership. A month earlier, he and she had married and eight months later he withdrew from the firm in order that the two of them could live abroad.[15][16] Samuel Roosevelt and the Cottons remained friends and were frequently seen together by society reporters.[29] Howard Potter was also an uncle of J. Leslie Cotton's first wife, Maria Louisa Potter.[30] He was a philanthropist and banker with the New York firm of Brown Brothers.[7][31]
  8. ^ Cotton lent a self-portrait and one she had made of Miss Eleanor Winslow. Her portraits of Mrs. Albert C. Stevens, Mrs. Lucius Wilmerding, and Samuel Montgomery Roosevelt, were lent by the sitters, who had commissioned them.[32]
  9. ^ Eleanor Winslow was an American socialite who lived with her mother in London during the 1890s and was then considered to be "the reigning unmarried American belle" in that city.[35] Mrs. Albert C. Stevens was a prominent American socialite considered to be "one of the handsomest matrons in New York society."[36] She was the daughter of a New York supreme court justice, John R. Brady. Her husband was a member of a wealthy family based in Hoboken, New Jersey. In 1894 he became a partner in a liquor importing firm, much as Cotton's husband had earlier done. His club memberships and social contacts overlapped considerably with those of Cotton's husband.[36][37] Mrs. L. K. Wilmerding was a Canadian who in 1876 had married the New York merchant and financier, Lucius K. Wilmerding.[38] Cotton painted the portraits of Stevens and Wilmerding in a New York studio she had rented during the winter of 1896-1897.[39]
  10. ^ Webb was a physician who turned businessman after his marriage to one of Cornelius Vanderbilt's granddaughters.[40] Breese was a financier and amateur photographer who owned a famous country home designed by Stanford White.[41]
  11. ^ The similarity of Sargent's and Cotton's styles probably also stemmed from their training since both had Carolus-Duran as teacher, although not at the same time.[45] In 1904 a critic for the Times associated Cotton's style with Sargent's, saying they both showed "easy and sure" brushwork.[46] The relationship between the two artists was apparently a cordial one. In 1904 a profile study a news reporter noticed that a "profile study" that Sargent had made of Cotton was on view in her New York studio.[47]
  12. ^ Positive reviews appeared in the New York Herald, New York Times, and New York Evening Post.[50][51][52]
  13. ^ Subjects of the portraits were, as usual, "well known men and women of society."[54] They included wealthy American businessmen and their families as well as the actress, Ethel Barrymore.[54] One of the portraits apparently caused a minor sensation. It showed Mrs. Albert Clifford Barney in a flowing garment that seemed about to slip off her shoulders. The sitter was an artist who shared a studio with Cotton at the time and the red garment was found to be "the kimono Mrs. Barney always wears when she is at work in her studio."[55]
  14. ^ Rather than having her come to Buckingham Palace, the king came to Cotton's studio in Chelsea.[67]
  15. ^ So, for example, society reporters noted that Cotton invited guests to see her work in 1903 ,[70][71] 1906,[61] 1913,[72] and 1930.[73]
  16. ^ A critic for the New York Herald described the portraits and said "Mrs. Cotton is an experienced and able painter of portraits."[74] The Christian Science Monitor reported Cotton's "fashionable who's-whos of New York and Paris at Reinhardt's."[75] The Sun contained a lengthy review by a noted critic, Henry McBride who commented on Cotton's vivid realization of her subjects, her intense interest in her subjects, and the artistic skill the portraits show.[76] The Schenectady Gazette claimed Cotton as one born in that city and called the show "one of the most important art exhibitions in New York at the present time."[77] The review in American Art News was more critical than the others, contrasting paintings seen to be "solidly painted, good and true in color, with excellently done details and natural expression," with others, "weak in construction, and artificial in effect."[78] The Fine Arts Journal contained an extract from McBride's review in the Sun.[79]
  17. ^ In addition to the Salon of 1889, she showed in 1903,[47] 1904,[80] 1907, 1912,[81] 1913,[82] 1914,[83] 1920,[84] 1921,[85] 1922,[86] 1923,[87] 1925,[88] 1927,[89] 1928,[90] 1930,[91] and 1931.[92]
  18. ^ Cotton gave 1868 as birth year in a passport application of 1921. Some modern sources do the same.[8] The passport application contains other inaccuracies raising doubts about the accuracy of the birth year and it is understandable that modern sources would use that readily available, though inaccurate, source.[2] A book of family history published in 1878 gives 1866[101] as does her death record[103] and that is the presumptive year in the U.S. Census reports of 1870 and 1880.[4][104]
  19. ^ It seems likely that Cotton and her future husband met at Union College where she was living and to which he would have made frequent family visits.
  20. ^ William Appleton Potter, who taught art at Union College, and who may have given Cotton informal instruction, was a step brother of her father who, later in life, earned his living as an architect.[7]
  21. ^ In 1896 a news report stated that a "Bishop Potter of New York" was related to Cotton but did not state how. Bishop Potter was Henry C. Potter, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New York and brother of Clarkson Potter, the father of J. Leslie Potter's first wife.[7] Following the death of his first wife, Sarah Potter, Maria Potter's grandfather, Alonzo Potter, had married Sarah (or Sally) Benedict whose family came from Connecticut. Since Cotton's father, Samuel Benedict, also came from a Connecticut family, there is some chance that Cotton's family relationship with the Potters was via Sarah Benedict.[106]
  22. ^ J. Leslie Cotton's brother, Henry Evan Cotton, was an Episcopal minister who participated in the wedding ceremony of Cotton and J. Leslie.[111] Two other brothers, William D. Cotton and Nathaniel H. Cotton, ran the shipping business their father had founded.[112] Nathaniel's daughter, Lillian, became a professional artist.[113]
  23. ^ The friends were Samuel M. Roosevelt and Montgomery R. Schuyler. The firm was Roosevelt & Schuyler. Roosevelt and J. Leslie Cotton were frequent companions in the New York and Newport social scenes.[115]
  24. ^ In the 1870s he had attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[119]
  25. ^ The sources of entries in this list are contemporary news reports.

References

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  1. ^ a b c d P.G. Konody (1926-12-12). "LONDON SEES AMERICAN PAINTINGS AND SCULPTURE: Work by Mrs. Leslie Cotton and Dr. Sheldon -- Royal Society of Portrait Painters". The New York Times. p. X13. Mrs. Cotton, who works in Paris, appears to enjoy an enviable degree of popularity, if one may judge from the formidable array of distinguished sitters who have passed through her studio. At her exhibition were to be found portraits of President Millerand, Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte, Prince Christopher of Greece, the Marquise de Taillerand, Countess Bernsdorf, Lady Abdy, Lord Robert Innes-Kerr, Lady Diana Cooper, Princesse Villa Rosa, the Marquis de Castellan, Prince Youssoupoff, and Marquesa Casati and many more personages of note.
  2. ^ a b c "Mariette Benedict in household of Samuel T Benedict, Schenectady, Schenectady, New York, United States". United States Census, 1880," database with images; citing enumeration district ED 106, sheet 177C, NARA microfilm publication T9 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 0929; FHL microfilm 1,254,929. Retrieved 2017-01-12. Name: Marietta Cotton; Event Type: Passport Application; Event Date: 1921; Event Place: France; Gender: Female; Birth Date: 17 May 1868; Birthplace: New York
  3. ^ a b c d "Obituaries; Mrs. Leslie Cotton". Schenectady Gazette. Schenectady, New York. 1947-04-23. p. 9. Mrs. Leslie Cotton, former resident of Schenectady and internationally known artist, died April 16 on Welfare Island at the age of 82. Born on Union college grounds, she was the former Miss Mariette Benedict, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Benedict. Mrs. Cotton, who once had studios in London and Paris, was the granddaughter of Prof. Isaac W. Jackson for whom the Jackson's garden at the college was named. She lived in Schenectady during her childhood and had recently been residing at the Pickwick Arms hotel in New York city.
  4. ^ a b c d "Mariette Benedict". ""United States Census, 1880," database with images, FamilySearch; Mariette Benedict in household of Samuel T Benedict, Schenectady, Schenectady, New York, United States; citing enumeration district ED 106, sheet 177C, NARA microfilm publication T9 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 0929; FHL microfilm 1,254,929. Retrieved 2017-01-12.
  5. ^ a b c "Society". Evening Telegram. New York, New York. 1888-07-14. p. 4. The engagement of Mr. Leslie Cotton to Miss Pansy Benedict, announced last week is rather a surprise to Mr. Cotton's admirers of the fair sex. Mr. Cotton married a daughter of Mr. Clarkson Poter who survived her wedding less than a year. Miss Benedict is as accomplished as she is handsome, and her paintings possess merits far above those of the average amateur. She is a daughter of the late Professor Jackson, of Union College, Schenectady.
  6. ^ a b c d "The Benedict Family". Selected Biographies, Schaffer Library, Union College, Schenectady, NY. Retrieved 2017-01-22.
  7. ^ a b c d e A Genealogy of the Potter Family Originating in Rhode Island. J.H. Campbell. 1881. pp. 9–10.
  8. ^ a b c "Lady in Black, William Merritt Chase". Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History, The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 2017-01-22.
  9. ^ William Merritt Chase (December 1908). "How I Painted My Greatest Picture". Delineator. 72 (6). New York: Butterick Publishing Co.: 967.
  10. ^ "William Merritt Chase, Lady in Black". Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 2017-01-26.
  11. ^ a b Kurtz, Charles M. (1889). "Catalogue of the Spring Exhibition, National Academy of Design". National Academy Notes. 9 (9). New York: Cassell & Co.: 7. JSTOR 25608108.
  12. ^ "The Academy Exhibition". Art Amateur. 20 (26001). Thomas J. Watson Library, The Metropolitan Museum of Art: 127. May 1889. JSTOR 25628951.
  13. ^ Ronald G. Pisano; William Merritt Chase; D. Frederick Baker (2007). William Merritt Chase: Portraits in oil. Yale University Press. p. 85. ISBN 978-0-300-11021-0.
  14. ^ "Portrait of a Lady in Pink". Museum of the Rhode Island School of Design. Retrieved 2017-01-26.
  15. ^ a b "Joseph Cotton and Mariette Benedict, 28 Jul 1888". "New York, New York City Marriage Records, 1829-1940," database, FamilySearch; citing Marriage, Manhattan, New York, New York, United States, New York City Municipal Archives, New York; FHL microfilm 1,558,391. Retrieved 2017-01-14.
  16. ^ a b c "Copartnerships". Evening Post. New York, New York. 1889-04-25. p. 7. On account of Mr. J. Leslie Cotton's permanently residing abroad he this day withdraws from the firm of Roosevelt & Schuyler, Wine and Commissions Merchants, Beaver St.
  17. ^ a b Marc Simpson; John Singer Sargent; Richard Ormond (1997). Uncanny Spectacle: The Public Career of the Young John Singer Sargent. Yale University Press. p. 10. ISBN 978-0-300-07177-1.
  18. ^ "Réoverture du musée national Jean-Jacques Henner" (PDF). Dossier de presse Musée national Jean-Jacques Henner. p. 17. Retrieved 2017-01-29.
  19. ^ Frederic Lees (1900). "The Work of Jean-Jacques Henner". The Studio. 18. London: Publ. The Studio: 82.
  20. ^ a b "The Royal Academy". The Academy, A Weekly Review of Literature, Science, and Art. 39. London: The Academy: 543. 1891-06-06. A remarkable debut in London is made by a young American artist of great promise, Mrs. Mariette Cotton, who has evidently acquired from her master, M. Carolus-Duran, many of the secrets of his powerful palette, and with them his felicity in the simple and direct presentation of a subject. In the half-length in oils, "F. T. Martin, Esq.," as in the pastel, "Mrs. Mahlon Sands," the youthful portrait painter reveals exceptional technical accomplishments. Her standpoint is as yet very naturally ultra-French; and, after the fashion of many of her most accomplished fellow countrymen, she too strongly tinges with this acquired colour the personality of her sitters. But if she can retain the technical mastery thus early achieved in the French atelier, while more fully developing her own artistic individuality, she will be able to accomplish great things.
  21. ^ a b c "Little Glory for Americans in the Salon". Sunday Express. Buffalo, New York. 1889-06-02. p. 1. No American gets a medal, and in each of the three divisions of the Beaux Arts a solitary "honorable mention" is accorded to an American. The recipients of this distinction are: In painting, Miss Mariette Cotton, for a portrait...
  22. ^ a b Ludovic Baschet, e. (1889). Exposition des Beaux-Arts; Salon de 1889; Catalogue illustré, Peinture & Sculpture. Librairie D'Art, Paris. p. 11.
  23. ^ "Social Gossip". Washington Post. Washington, D.C. 1907-10-27. p. E6. Mr. Bradley Martin and his brother, Mr. Frederick Townsend Martin, have been entertaining at the Hotel Ritz, London. The sprightly Mrs. Leslie Cotton, whose portrait once won a great complement from Sargent, and who is now much to the fore in England, has even greater prestige since she has painted a portrait of the King, was a guest at the luncheon given by Mr. Frederick Townsend Martin She is a relative of the Martins, and they have always taken a great interest in her work. Several times she was a guest of Mrs. Henry M. Flagler at Palm Beach, where Mr. Frederick Townsend Martin is so popular. Mr. and Mrs. Bradley Martin's dinner at the Ritz ... was much like a family party. Their guests included their son-in-law, Mr. Bradley Martin, jr., and Mr. Henry Sands.
  24. ^ "Art Chronicle". The Portfolio: An Artistic Periodical. 22. London: Seeley & Co.: xi 1891.
  25. ^ Frederick Townsend Martin (1913). Things I remember. John Lane company. p. 188.
  26. ^ a b "The Summer Exhibitions at Home and Abroad; III, The Royal Academy and New Gallery; Portraits". Art Journal. 53. London: J.S. Virtue & Co.: 200 1891. Among meritorious performances coming under this heading, to which we are unable to refer in detail, are Mrs. Mariette Cotton's "Mrs. Mahlon Sands" and "Frederick Martin, Esq." (both at the Royal Academy)..
  27. ^ a b "Social Notes; Bachelors as Hosts". New York Herald. 1895-02-17. p. 7. Although leaving New York directly after her marriage, Mrs. Leslie Cotton, formerly the beautiful Miss Pansy Benedict, has by no means been forgotten by her many friends here, who have followed with great interest her progress in the world of art. She has painted the portraits of many distinguished men and women in Europe, the Duke of Cambridge and Bismarck among them. Two of Mrs. Cotton's recent portraits, those of Messrs. Samuel Roosevelt and Howard Potter, have been on exhibition for several days at Knoedler's, where they have been viewed by many people. It is not unlikely that Mrs. Cotton and her husband may return to New York for a while, though they are most delightfully situated in London.
  28. ^ New York Supplement. West Publishing Company. 1889. p. 76.
  29. ^ "Roosevelt Yacht Afire". Syracuse Evening Herald. Syracuse, New York. 1903-08-14. p. 11.
  30. ^ a b "Joseph Leslie Cotton and Maria Louise Potter, 07 Jun 1881". "New York Marriages, 1686-1980," database, FamilySearch; FHL microfilm 1,562,450. Retrieved 2017-01-16.
  31. ^ John Crosby Brown (1909). A hundred years of merchant banking: a history of Brown Brothers and Company. Priv. Print. pp. 324–328.
  32. ^ a b Loan exhibition of portraits for the benefit of St. John's Guild and the Orthopaedic hospital by National Academy of Design. National Academy of Design, New York. 1895. p. 19.
  33. ^ "What is Going on in Society". The Sun. New York. 1895-11-03. Mrs. Leslie Cotton has several full-length canvases, of which her portrait of Miss Winslow is by far the best. The figure is admirably painted, and the folds of the black satin dress would be a study for a fashion artist. The face is in profile, and the artist has imparted to it a dignity and distinction quite apart from any charm of feature or expression, and which Mrs. Cotton has the happy faculty of giving to her sitters wherever any trace of it can be found. In her portrait of Mr. Howard Potter and of the Duke of Cambridge, both of which have been condemned in England and this country as being unnecessarily realistic in regard to the ravages of time, the unmistakable air of race and dignity marks each as every inch a gentleman.
  34. ^ "Types of Fair Women". Munsey's Magazine. 39. New York: Frank A. Munsey: 172. May 1896. [The exhibition includes] six paintings by Mrs. Leslie Cotton, including one of the artist herself. The character of the pictures was such that the catalogue holder was pretty sure to turn to this last portrait with a good deal of interest. When he found it, he was quite sure to be astonished. This smiling, young, modish society woman, seemingly coming out of the frame with outstretched hand to greet you, looked too much the woman of fashion to be the hard working artist.
  35. ^ "Newport's Gayest Time; Handsome Women in Fine Gowns in Ballroom and Tennis Field". New York Herald. 1894-08-26. p. 11. Miss Eleanor Winslow, at present the reigning unmarried American belle in London, is expected to arrive in Newport early next week. Miss Winslow, who is a Boston girl, has been in London for the past six years with her mother, who has a house in South Audley street.
  36. ^ a b "Society Men in Trade; One of the Hoboken Stevenses the Latest Venturer". The Sun. New York. 1894-10-11. p. 7.
  37. ^ "Justice John R. Brady Dies of Apoplexy". New York Herald. 1891-03-17. p. 3.
  38. ^ "Mrs. Lucius Kellogg Wilmerding (1853-1931)". New-York Historical Society. Retrieved 2017-01-30.
  39. ^ a b "Presented at Court". New York Herald. 1897-05-16. p. 2. Mrs. Leslie Cotton is as well known in London as in New York. She is a clever portrait painter, the Duke of Cambridge and Bismarck having been among her most famous subjects. Mrs. Cotton had a studio in New York last winter, where she painted Mrs. C. Albert Stevens, Mrs. L.K. Wilmerding, Miss Madeline Cutting, Colonel Herbert Eaton, Mssrs. J.L. Breese and Seward Webb.
  40. ^ "Vanderbilt rehab a study in family memories". Chicago Tribune. Chicago, Illinois. 2005-05-01. Retrieved 2017-01-12.
  41. ^ "Southampton's James L. Breese and the Vanderbilt Cup Races". Retrieved 2017-01-30.
  42. ^ "Portraits by Mrs. Cotton". The Sun. New York. 1896-11-22. p. 10. Three portraits by MLC are shown this week in Knoedler's Galleries. Mrs. Cotton, who is related to Bishop Potter, of New York, has studied under Carolus Duran. She shows a full length portrait of herself and two smaller portraits of Dr. W. Seward Webb and Mr. James L. Breese. They are all painted in a vigorous style unusual in a woman. Many will like the handling of the Breese portrait better than the others. Mrs. Cotton has on view a portrait of herself gowned in red and wearing a smile. The portrait of Dr. Webb is very lifelike.
  43. ^ "Some Pictures at the Galleries". The New York Times. 1896-12-15. p. 5. Three portraits by Mrs. Leslie Cotton of Dr. Stewart Webb, James L. Breese, and the fair artist herself, are now on view.. All evidence the influence of Mrs. Cotton's master, Sargent, but all have substantial merit of their own, albeit a trifle "painty." Mr. Breese's portrait is a three-quarter face, good in expression, well modeled, and fresh in color. The mustachios and beard are rather too carelessly handled, however. Dr. Webb's portrait is a three-quarter length and is an admirable likeness. The pose is a trifle constrained. The artist depicts herself at full length, clad in a rather startling crimson gown, very décollete, and turning full face front as she raises her gown with her right hand and pushes aside a tapestry hanging with the left. She has caught her own laughing eyes, tumbled black hair, and fresh complexion well, but the right shoulder from which the gown seems slipping down is a trifle too prominent. Despite these and other minor defects in Mrs. Cotton's work, due probably to undue haste, a little carelessness, and some overstriving for effect, she shows much promise and unusual cleverness.
  44. ^ a b c Lady Mary (1906-05-13). "American Woman a Promising Artist". Chicago Sunday Tribune. Chicago, Illinois. p. III/3. It is predicted by competent critics that Mrs. Leslie Cotton, the beautiful American, has a brilliant career before her as a portrait painter. A society woman herself, she first took up painting as an amusement. Sargent has helped her considerably by advice and criticism, and he is greatly interested in the exhibition she is giving of her pictures May 17.
  45. ^ a b c "Through the Lorgnette; Painting Her Society Friends". New York Press. 1903-08-14. p. 7. Mrs. Leslie Cotton, whose charm of manner is great, is combining business with pleasure at Palm Beach. She has undertaken to paint portraits of several persons prominent in Florida. She has finished a fanciful portrait of Mrs. Flagler and a canvas of the Duchess of Manchester is half done. Just why Mrs. Cotton has challenged Sargent, Torrey and Hall in the portrait-painting field is not clear. She was a Miss Benedict, and lives in a fine, old-fashioned mansion in Fifth avenue. A rumor has gone the rounds that she was painting these portraits "for the fun of the thing," but not many persons put credence in this report. Other women of fashion have turned to the brush for diversion. Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney does impressionistic landscapes and has a studio in the Beaux Arts building and Mrs. Coudert, as Amalia Kussner, is one of the foremost miniature painters in the world.
  46. ^ "Art Notes". The New York Times. 1904-12-25. p. 2. Mrs. Cotton's likeness of Mr. Brayton Ives is a capital bit of painting, and as a resemblance leaves nothing to be desired; the brush work is easy and sure, like Sargent's.
  47. ^ a b "Mrs. Leslie Cotton". American Art News. 3 (60). New York: American Art News Co.: 2 1904-12-31. JSTOR 25590085. Mrs. Leslie Cotton, in the short time she has lived in this city, has won an enviable reputation as a portrait painter. A serious student of her art, she painted portraits long before she had any intention of taking up the work as a profession. Though a New Yorker, she spent much time abroad, and at one time lived in London and Paris, where she painted many well-known people, among them the duke of Cambridge.
  48. ^ "The Week in Art". The New York Times. 1900-03-31. p. BR14.
  49. ^ "The Collector and Art Critic [Notes]". The Collector and Art Critic. 2 (12). Thomas J. Watson Library, The Metropolitan Museum of Art: 195–199. 1900-04-15. JSTOR 25435402.
  50. ^ a b "Art News". Evening Post. New York. 1901-04-06. p. 19.
  51. ^ "Notes of the Art World". New York Herald. 1901-04-03. p. 10.
  52. ^ "Art Notes". The New York Times. 1901-04-05. p. 9.
  53. ^ a b c "Art and Artists; Gilbert Munger's Landscapes—Portraits by Mrs. Leslie Cotton and Wilhelm Funk". Commercial Advertiser. New York. 1904-01-05.
  54. ^ a b c "Art Exhibits". New York Herald. 1904-01-05. p. 13. Ability to secure a good likeness, much power of characterization, and as a rule good drawing and effective color, are the chief characteristics of Mrs. Cotton's work.
  55. ^ "Through the Lorgnette; Mrs. Barney's Kimono". New York Press. 1904-10-28. The mystery of the most daring portrait that has ever been shown in public in New York has been revealed. When Mrs. Leslie Cotton exhibited a life-sized half-length portrait of Mrs. Albert Clifford Barney in Knoedler's last season everybody who saw it gasped.
  56. ^ a b "Hard Work of Rich Women; Literature and the Arts Attract Many". The Sun. New York. 1906-02-04. p. 3. Mrs. Leslie Cotton, who was Miss Pansy Benedict before her marriage, is a welcome guest at the most exclusive houses in New York, and few women are more popular at Newport. Yet Mrs. Cotton now supports herself and her family by her portraits. The possession of talent, a large visiting list and the ability to make her sitters acquainted with her society friends are elements that can make a portrait painter very successful.
  57. ^ "[Art News]". American Art News. 4 (29). New York: American Art News Co.: 2 1906-04-28. Late letters received from London state that Mrs. Leslie Cotton, who has been abroad for over a year past, is fast recovering from a long and serious illness, which kept her in a hospital for some time. She has had great artistic success in London, and has paint-ed a number of portraits there, including one of her friend. Lady Saville. She is arranging a special exhibition of her pictures in London, to be held in May.
  58. ^ "Lady Cunard, Noted as Hostess, Is Dead". The New York Times. 1948-07-11. p. 52.
  59. ^ a b "A Famous Beauty at Washington". New York Tribune. 1912-10-25. p. 9. Gertrude Lady Savile death announced last week was the fascinating Mrs. Horace Helyar, who a quarter of a century ago was the most feted beauty of Washington, where her husband was attached as second secretary to the British Embassy. She was the toast of the town not only in the national capital, but also in New York, and it is doubtful whether there has ever been since any woman of the foreign diplomatic corps accredited to this country who has enjoyed on this side of the Atlantic so widespread a celebrity for loveliness and charm.
  60. ^ "Lady Savile Once a Famous Beauty". Washington Post. Washington, D.C. 1912-10-22. p. 6.
  61. ^ a b c "Through the Lorgnette; American Painter Conquers London". New York Press. 1906-05-18. p. 9. One more American to conquer London is Mrs. Leslie Cotton, portrait painter, who is getting many orders to paint the portraits of women in society. She has two warm supporters in Lady Cunard and Lady Saville and they have obtained recognition for her. Lady Saville says she "discovered" Mrs. Cotton. At any rate, the first English work of the artist was a painting of Lady Saville. She makes her home in the latter woman's town house, where a spacious studio on the upper floor has been arranged for her. It is the height of "good form" in the afternoon now, at the height of the London season, to drop in on Mrs. Cotton and her titled hostess and sip a cup of tea. The American artist has made several portraits for Lady Cunard and members of her family. She spent several months last summer in Lady Cunard's country home in Nevill Holt. Other portraits she has painted and which have been the talk of the smaller exhibitions where they have been shown are of Mrs. John Leslie, Princess Hatzfeldt, the Earl of Clarendon, Viscountess Churchill and the German Ambassador.
  62. ^ a b c "Paints King's Picture; Mrs. Cotton's Work Pleases British Sovereign; Will Pose For Her Again". Washington Post. Washington, D.C. 1908-01-12. p. 15.
  63. ^ Paul Lambeth (1907-09-22). "King Edward Leaves Theater in Disgust". Buffalo Courier. Buffalo, New York. p. 15.
  64. ^ "American Painting King; Portrait by Mrs. Leslie Cotton of New York Pleases Ruler". The New York Times. 1904-12-25. p. 2. Mrs. Cotton's likeness of Mr. Brayton Ives is a capital bit of painting, and as a resemblance leaves nothing to be desired; the brush work is easy and sure, like Sargent's.
  65. ^ a b Lady Mary (1907-10-06). "Lady Mary's Gossip". New York Press. p. 4.
  66. ^ "Two Friends". The Bystander: An Illustrated Weekly, Devoted to Travel, Literature, Art, the Drama, Progress, Locomotion. 19 (17). The Frick Collection: 1–8. 1908-09-02. JSTOR 25590324.
  67. ^ "Mrs. Cotton Paints King". American Art News. 6 (17). The Frick Collection: 5. 1908-02-08. JSTOR 25590324.
  68. ^ a b "Survey of the Art Field; Mrs. Cotton's Work Exhibited Here; Striking Portrait of King Edward in Easy Pose one of the Features". New York Herald. 1908-03-22. p. 4. It has been said, and with good reason, that Mrs Cotton has succeeded in portraying the King as he is known and beloved by his people—genial, amiable, yet never overstepping the bounds of dignity imposed by his great office. In fact, the portrait is so successful that it looks as if it had been sketched outdoors from life, rapidly yet unerringly, and then completed from sittings in London, where Mrs. Cotton has a studio in Tite street, for many years the home of Whistler.
  69. ^ "Many Landscapes in Art Galleries; Sculptures by Prince Paul Troubetskoy—Mrs. Leslie Cotton's Oils". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, New York. 1914-02-21. p. 7. There is little doubt of the talent of Mrs. Leslie Cotton, who shows portraits in oil, in the upper gallery at Knoedler's, for she paints with conviction, with much feeling and with convincing result. She shows portraits of Lady Dufferin, Lady Curzon, Lady Maidstone, General Brayton Ives and Mrs. Peto. There is also a full length portrait of Maxine Elliott in fine pose, besides an excellent example showing the French sculptor, Rodin, with white beard and captivating smile.
  70. ^ "Dreyfus Not to Employ Labori; LUNCHEON TO MRS. ASTOR; Mrs. Leslie Cotton's Tea; Genesee Society Dinner". The New York Times. 1903-12-21. p. 7.
  71. ^ a b "Through the Lorgnette". New York Press. 1903-12-27. p. 7. One of the most interesting hostesses in town is Mrs. Leslie Cotton, whose speciality is studio teas. Mrs. Cotton is an amateur portrait painter, yet her work entitles her to a higher place. Mrs. Cotton was Miss Mariette Benedict, and her social position is of the very best. Her studio has all the drawing room appurtenances, and is hung with the richest old tapestries. Her teas bring out an interesting throng, principally the fashionable set, with a dash of the literary and musical elements. Mrs. Cotton insists that her portrait painting is not a fad and she works seriously week in and week out. She has done some canvases that entitle her to higher rank among American painters, but when a woman is fashionable she is the last to receive due appreciation of her talents. Several praise-worthy canvases by Mrs. Cotton were exhibited at the recent portrait show.
  72. ^ "News of the World; Fancy Dress Dinners Now in Great Vogue in London; Miss Cotton's Works on View". The Sun. New York. 1913-10-30. p. 8. Miss Leslie Cotton, the New York artist, had a remarkable social success at her studio this week. Throngs of society people in London attended, all anxious to see the latest pictures and portraits of Lady Curzon, who is called the most beautiful woman in England, and Maxine Elliot, a representative American beauty. Lady Curzon is a tall blonde with a pink and white complexion. Miss Elliott's picture was painted in the costume of a Zulcka in "Joseph and His Brethren." Miss Cotton has also painted a striking portrait of the Marchioness of Dufferin and Ava, who was Miss Florence Davis of New York.
  73. ^ "DA COSTA SHOWS PAINTINGS: Mrs. Leslie Cotton Exhibits Her Portraits at the Plaza". The New York Times. 1930-01-21. p. 25.
  74. ^ "[Photo captions]". New York Herald. 1917-03-04. p. 10.
  75. ^ "Art News and Comment; Climax of the Art Season". Christian Science Monitor. Boston, Massachusetts. 1917-03-16.
  76. ^ a b "Portraits by an Ex-Schenectadian Highly Praised; Exhibit of Paintings by Mrs. Leslie Cotton Wins Much Favorable Comment". Schenectady Gazette. Schenectady, New York. 1917-03-20. p. 2.
  77. ^ Henry McBride (1917-03-18). "News and Comment in the World of Art". The Sun. New York. p. 10.
  78. ^ a b c "Portraits by Mrs. Leslie Cotton". American Art News. 15 (22): 4. 1917-03-10.
  79. ^ Henry McBride (April 1917). "Exhibitions at the New York Galleries". Fine Arts Journal. 35 (4): 279.
  80. ^ "Paris Salon". New York Daily Tribune. 1904-05-16.
  81. ^ "Opens Art Salon in Paris". The Sun. New York. 1912-04-13. p. 3. 1. Mrs. Leslie Cotton, Portrait by Sargent Survey of the Art Field; Mrs. Cotton's Work Exhibited Here; Striking Portrait of King Edward in Easy Pose one of the Features
  82. ^ a b "American Artists Are Prominent in This Year's Salon". New York Herald. 1913-04-11. p. 3.
  83. ^ "Few Americans in Beaux Arts Salon". The Sun. New York. 1914-04-12. p. 8.
  84. ^ "Paris Letter". American Art News. 18 (29). New York: American Art News Co.: 27 1920-05-08.
  85. ^ "Salons Honor America". American Art News. 19 (27). New York: American Art News Co.: 1 1921-04-16.
  86. ^ "Paris Salon Marks Bonhur Centenery". American Art News. 20 (32). New York: American Art News Co.: 4 1922-05-20.
  87. ^ "Fifty Americans at the Paris Salon". Art News. 21 (30). New York: American Art News Co.: 1 1923-05-05.
  88. ^ a b "Work of 39 Americans Shown in Paris Salon". Washington Post. Washington, D.C. 1925-06-07. p. E6.
  89. ^ Evelyn McDonald (1927-05-31). "1927 Salon, 5,000 Canvases". Niagara Falls Gazette. Niagara Falls, New York. p. 9.
  90. ^ "Americans Show Art in Paris Salon". Evening Leader. Corning, New York. 1928-05-26. p. 4.
  91. ^ "Few Americans in Salon at Paris". New York Evening Post. 1931-04-30. p. 21.
  92. ^ "SPRING ART SHOWS DRAW PARIS CROWDS: Artistes Francais, Independents and Societe Nationale Present Nearly 8,000 Items. AMERICAN WORK ON VIEW". The New York Times. 1930-05-04. p. N2.
  93. ^ a b "Women Here and There". The New York Times. 1903-08-14. p. BR14. Mrs. Leslie Cotton is indefatigable in painting the portraits of millionaires and millionaires' wives. Just now she is busily engaged in making a portrait of Mrs. William B. Leeds. In order to do this she has been Mrs. Leeds's guest at Bar Harbor on the yacht "Nona," and she came down with the Leedses last week to attend the cup races. Mrs. Cotton contends that it takes some time for an artist to catch a likeness, and that one must see the subject in all moods and under many conditions. Last Winter she did an excellent painting of Mrs. Henry Flagler, after staying with her for some weeks at Palm Beach. Mrs. Cotton was Miss Pansy Benedict, and was a New York belle in society, with a pretty talent for painting, before she took it up as a profession.
  94. ^ "Among the Artists". American Art News. 3 (56). New York: American Art News Co.: 2 1904-12-03.
  95. ^ "Week of Interest to High Circles of English Society". Buffalo Courier. Buffalo, New York. 1913-11-19. p. 47.
  96. ^ a b "Mrs. Leslie Cotton Here; Comes from Paris to Paint". New York Herald. 1916-01-12. p. 11.
  97. ^ "Through the Lorgnette; Sailor Blue and Satanic Red". New York Press. 1905-01-10. Mrs. Leslie Cotton, who would rather be mentioned as a portrait painter than as a society woman (which she is by right of birth), presents a striking contrast when at her easel to that common idea of a woman artist as being in faded, formless draperies. Her working costume is a smart sailor suit of navy blue serge, open at the neck like the blouses of our Navy men in the summertime. The sleeves have tight bands at the wrists and ornaments of fouled anchors embroidered above. As she moves around the studio while at work she looks more like a girl ready for a yachting party than one of our most successful "painters to society." In striking contrast to this trig costume is that Mrs. Cotton's studio companion and fellow-artist, Mrs. A.C. Barney, who wears demurely a loose kimono of a satanic shade of red.
  98. ^ "Women of Wealth, Scorning to Be Idle, Winning Both Fame and Money in Artistic Pursuits". Washington Post. Washington, D.C. 1906-03-25. p. SM1.
  99. ^ "Wealthy Society Women; Working Fame and Fortune in Artistic Pleasure". Globe. Utica, N.Y. 1909-04-07. p. 7.
  100. ^ a b "Mrs. Roosevelt Gives Large Luncheon at White House: Wives of Foreign Diplomats, Senators, Representatives and Those with Important Positions in Government are Present". Washington Post. Washington, D.C. 1940-02-01. p. 12.
  101. ^ a b Proceedings of the Sesqui-centennial Gathering of the Descendants of Isaac and Ann Jackson: At Harmony Grove, Chester Co., Pa., Eighth Month, Twenty-fifth, 1875 : Together with the Family Genealogy. Philadelphia: Published by Committee for the Family. 1878. p. 163.
  102. ^ W. H. McElroy and Alex. McBride (1875). Life Sketches of Government Officers and Members of the Legislature of the State of New York for 1875. Albany, N.Y.: Weed, Parsons, and Co. p. 163.
  103. ^ "Marriette Cotton, 17 Apr 1947". "New York, New York City Municipal Deaths, 1795-1949," database FamilySearch; citing Death, Manhattan, New York, New York, United States, New York Municipal Archives, New York; FHL microfilm 2,133,605. Retrieved 2017-01-14. Event Date: 17 Apr 1947; Event Place: Manhattan, New York, New York, United States Address: 230 East 51st St.; Residence Place: New York, New York, New York; Gender: Female; Age: 80; Marital Status: Divorced; Race: White; Occupation: housewife; Birth Date: 17 May 1866; Birthplace: U.S.A.; Burial Date: 21 Apr 1947; Cemetery: Fresh Pond Crematory; Father's Name: Samuel T. Benedict; Father's Birthplace: U.S.A.; Mother's Name: Julia J. Jackson; Mother's Birthplace: U.S.A.; Spouse's Name: Leslie
  104. ^ "Samuel Benedict in household of Isaac W Jackson, New York, United States". "United States Census, 1870," database with images, FamilySearch; ; citing p. 60, family 511, NARA microfilm publication M593 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.); FHL microfilm 552,589. Retrieved 2017-02-06.
  105. ^ "Joseph Lillis Cotton in entry for Clarkson Dudley Cotton, 04 Apr 1882". "New York, New York City Municipal Deaths, 1795-1949," database, FamilySearch; citing Death, Manhattan, New York, New York, United States, New York Municipal Archives, New York; FHL microfilm 1,322,619. Retrieved 2017-01-16.
  106. ^ "Benedict Descendants Report (Generation 8)". Retrieved 2017-02-11.
  107. ^ a b "Beautiful Women". New York Herald. 1904-04-24. p. 8.
  108. ^ "MRS. COTTON A NEW YORKER.: American Woman Who Will Paint King's Portrait Prominent Socially". Washington Post. Washington, D.C. 1907-09-05. p. 2.
  109. ^ "Joseph Leslie Cotton, 16 April 1856". "Barbados Baptisms, 1739-1891," database, FamilySearch; citing, reference p79; FHL microfilm 1,157,969. Retrieved 2017-02-06.
  110. ^ Benjamin Franklin Parker (1901). History of Wolfeborough (New Hampshire). Published by the Town. p. 176. Colonel William Cotton was born in Portsmouth, Feb. 29, 1738. He served as a soldier in the French and Indian War, and after- wards became a colonel in the New Hampshire militia. October 20, 1761, he married Mary Clark, who was born Dec. 17, 1737, and died in Wolfeborough, March 17, 1798. Col. Cotton came to Wolfeborough in 1781, and settled on the farm now owned by his great grandson, Albert W. Cotton. ... Dudley P. Cotton, a son of his, went to the West Indies and became wealthy. Subsequently he returned to Wolfeborough, and purchased a farm in the neighborhood where he was born, purposing to make it his future abode. He contributed quite generously for the improvement of the highways and schools in the neighborhood, but not receiving so ardent co-operative response to his acts as he desired, he disposed of his property and returned to his island home, where he soon after died.
  111. ^ Lucy Abigail Brainard (1908). Descendants of Daniel, James and Joshua Brainerd, sons of Daniel and Hannah (Spencer) Brainerd. Case, Lockwood and Brainard Co. p. 109.
  112. ^ Illustrated Boston, the metropolis of New England. American Publishing and Engraving Co. 1889. p. 187. ISBN 978-5-87382-905-7.
  113. ^ "Lillian Cotton, an Artist In National Academy Shows". The New York Times. 1962-10-10. p. 47.
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