Sadakichi Hartmann (born November 8, 1867, Nagasaki, Japan—died November 21, 1944, St. Petersburg, Florida, U.S.) was an American art critic, novelist, poet, and man of letters.
The son of a German father and Japanese mother, Hartmann went to the United States as a boy (he became a naturalized citizen in 1894). While living in Philadelphia from 1882 to 1885, he befriended the elderly Walt Whitman, visiting the author at his home in Camden, New Jersey. As a young man Hartmann became acquainted with many of the major artistic and literary figures in Europe and the United States. He was quick to appreciate the importance of French Symbolism and became friends with Stéphane Mallarmé, one of the leaders of the movement. He was also influenced by the Belgian Symbolist writer Maurice Maeterlinck.
A prolific writer for Boston and New York City newspapers in the 1880s and ’90s, Hartmann started the Art Critic in 1893, wrote Symbolist dramas, lectured, and became a disciple of the American photographer and art entrepreneur Alfred Stieglitz. His articles appeared regularly in Camera Work, Stieglitz’s revolutionary magazine, where Hartmann wrote about photography with the same zeal he brought to his essays about art.
Hartmann published the two-volume A History of American Art (1901; new rev. ed., 1932) and many other works advocating the recognition of avant-garde art and artists. The Sadakachi Hartmann Archive is kept at the University of California, Riverside, where a number of his out-of-print volumes have been edited for republication. They include Composition in Portraiture (1909; reissued 1973) and Landscape and Figure Composition (1910; reissued 1973), both under the pseudonym Sidney Allen; Conversations with Walt Whitman (1895; reprinted 1972), under the pseudonym Sadakichi; Shakespeare in Art (1901; reissued 1973) and Japanese Art (1904; reprinted 1971); and The Valiant Knights of Daguerre (1978), a collection of Hartmann’s critical essays and biographical studies.