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Mary
Cassatt was born in 1844 in Allegheny City (now part of Pittsburgh),
Pennsylvania, she was recognized by the turn of the century as one
of the preeminent painters both of her native country and of France,
which she made her permanent home in 1875.
Mary Cassatt spent her childhood in Pennsylvania, and then lived with her
mother in Europe from 1851 until 1858, studying in a number of cities
including Paris, Parma, and Seville. She returned to study at the
Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts from 1861 to 1865 and in 1866
went back to France, which she decided was best suited for her professional
goals. There, Mary Cassatt spent much time studying works by artists living
and deceased, and painted with Auguste Renoir, Alfred Sisley, and
Degas. Her first public success came at the Salon of 1868 with a
painting praised by a New York Times critic for its "vigor of treatment
and fine qualities of color". Cassatt continued to exhibit at the
Salon through the mid-1870s, and attracted the attention of Edgar
Degas, who invited her to join the artists dedicated to the "new
painting", the Impressionists.
At this time, Mary Cassatt abandoned the somber palette and traditional subject
matter of the Academic style in favor of the light-filled modern
life compositions favored by her colleagues, among them Monet, Renoir,
and Morisot. She quickly adopted impressionist techniques of applying
paint rapidly from a bright palette. Cassatt developed her own subject
matter, using her family members as models because her lifestyle,
with aging parents, was much more confined than that of the male
Impressionists who were able to spend time in cafes and paint subjects
of society life. From 1879 to 1886 she was one of only three women
to exhibit with the Impressionists, and the only American woman.
In 1878, at the request of Julian Weir, Mary Cassatt sent two of her paintings
to him in America for exhibition with the Society of American Artists.
These paintings were among the first Impressionist works to be shown
in America. However, she received much more attention in France
than she ever did in the United States. While some critics were
perplexed by the sketchy quality of her paint handling and the bold
colors of the works Cassatt showed at the Impressionist exhibition
of 1879, by 1881 she was almost uniformly praised, with two critics
citing her work as the highlight of that year's exhibition.
It was in the 1881 Impressionist exhibition that Cassatt first
displayed pictures of the mother and child theme for which she is
best known. Though a sensitive painter of women and even the occasional
male subject, Cassatt achieved her greatest success in the depiction
of maternity. She elevated the genre from the realm of the sentimental
or anecdotal through a careful attention to naturalistic pose and
gesture, to the exchange of gazes between mother and child, and
with the use of animated brush strokes and bright tones.
After the final Impressionist exhibition of 1886, Mary Cassatt began
to experiment more widely, transforming her imagery with references
to Old Master Madonna and Child paintings as well as Japanese prints.
Her experiments with printmaking at this time resulted in one of
the great graphic monuments of the nineteenth century: the set of
ten color prints first shown at Galeries Durand-Ruel in Paris in
1891. Gradually she abandoned Impressionist work for paintings that
emphasized shapes and forms. She did a series of color prints that
combined drypoint, etching, and aquatint by studying Japanese woodblock
techniques. From 1890, she had her own printing press at her home.
As the years progressed, Mary Cassatt became increasingly involved with
women's rights causes. She painted a mural for the Womens Building
in the 1893 Chicago World's Exposition on the theme of "Modern Woman",
and also helped organize an exhibition of pictures by Old Masters
and Degas, in addition to her own works, to benefit woman suffrage
in 1915.
Mary Cassatt resided in Europe, mostly at her country chateau near Paris,
the remainder of her life except during the Franco-Prussian War
when her family insisted she return to Philadelphia. She brought
much of her work back with her, and unfortunately it was destroyed
in a fire, so that the early European part of her career largely
undocumented. She lived into the 20th century, but it is generally
thought that the quality of her work declined. By 1914 she had to
give up painting because of poor eyesight. Mary Cassatt died in 1926.
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