Mary Cassatt: Little Girl in a Blue Armchair

See More Mary Cassatt At Sunnyside Mary Cassatt at Christie’s Mary Cassatt at Sotheby’s Mary Cassatt at wikimedia commons Mary Cassatt at Art Institute of Chicago Works by Mary Cassatt at Nationa Gallery of Art, Washington, DC Read More Mary Cassatt at wikiwand Mary Cassatt at The Art Story Little Girl in a Blue Armchair at…

Mary Cassatt: On a Balcony

“During Mary Cassatt’s early Impressionist period, she frequently focused on the activities of middle-class women in society—at the theater or taking tea, for example. At first glance, the arresting painting ‘On a Balcony’, which was shown in the 1880 Impressionist exhibition, appears to depict a woman in a public setting. However, the blue rail of…

Mary Cassatt: Sleepy Nicolle

See More Mary Cassatt At Sunnyside Mary Cassatt at Christie’s Mary Cassatt at Sotheby’s Mary Cassatt at wikimedia commons Mary Cassatt at Art Institute of Chicago Works by Mary Cassatt at Nationa Gallery of Art, Washington, DC Read More Mary Cassatt at wikiwand Mary Cassatt at The Art Story Thanks for Visiting 🌻 ~Sunnyside

Mary Cassatt: Young Girl at a Window (c.1883-84)

See More Mary Cassatt At Sunnyside Works by Mary Cassatt at Nationa Gallery of Art, Washington, DC Mary Cassatt at wikimedia commons Read More Mary Cassatt at The Art Story Mary Cassatt at wikiwand Thanks for Visiting 🌻 ~Sunnyside

Mary Cassatt: The Life of an Artist

“With the exception of a brief return to Philadelphia in 1870, during the Franco-Prussian War, Cassatt remained in Europe for the remainder of her life, settling permanently in Paris in 1875. Two years later, she became the only American artist to join the French Impressionist group at the invitation of her close friend, Edgar Degas….

Mary Cassatt: Children Playing With Dog (1907)

“An exceptional example of the American Impressionist Mary Cassatt’s famed depictions of motherhood, Children Playing with a Dog presents the unconditional love and complex relationship between a mother and her two children with both psychological and stylistic finesse. While the Madonna and Child has a long historical precedent, Cassatt transformed the subject into her own signature theme….

Mary Cassatt: Young Lady in a Loge Gazing to Right (1878-79)

“…As Paul Gauguin, the original owner of Young Lady in a Loge Gazing to Right, reflected after viewing another painting in the series, “Mlle Cassatt has as much charm, but she has more power” than her female contemporaries (as quoted in The Queen Bees: The Women Who Shaped America, New York, 1979, p. 117). It…

Cassatt, Capuçon, and Saint-Saëns

Hear More Website: https://www.hr-sinfonieorchester.de ∙ See More Mary Cassatt At Sunnyside Mary Cassatt at wikimedia commons Works by Mary Cassatt at Nationa Gallery of Art, Washington, DC Read More Mary Cassatt at The Art Story Mary Cassatt at wikiwand Mary Cassatt’s Pastels at the National Gallery Happy Friday 🌻 ~Sunnyside

Mary Cassatt: Lydia Crocheting in the Garden at Marly

“Cassatt and her family spent the summer of 1880 at Marly-le-Roi, about ten miles west of Paris. Ignoring the village’s historic landmarks in her art, Cassatt focused instead on the domestic environment. Here, she portrayed her elder sister, Lydia, fashionably dressed and insulated by a walled garden from any modern hurly-burly. Lydia is absorbed in…

Mary Cassatt: The Tea

“Cassatt’s paintings often document the social interactions of well-to-do women like herself. The activities they depict—tea drinking, going to the theatre, tending children—fall within the normal routine for Cassatt’s sex and class. Yet the painter’s insistence upon representing such episodes from the modern world (even a sheltered segment of it), her dislike for narrative, and…

Mary Cassatt: In the Box

Hat Tip Thanks to Claudio Capriolo at La Regina Gioiosa Musica & Musica for introducing me to Ensemble Rhapsody in his post Quartetto con oboe. Hear More Ensemble Rhapsody at youtube Thanks for Visiting 🌻 ~Sunnyside

Mary Cassatt: Mother and Two Children

“I do not admit that a woman can draw like that,” said Edgar Degas when he saw one of Mary Cassatt’s pictures. David Lowe continues in American Heritage, At eight o’clock on the evening of June 14, 1926, a very old woman—blind and suffering from advanced diabetes—died in her chateau on the edge of the…