Mary
Cassatt (1844-1926)
lived in Europe for five
years as a young girl.
She was tutored
privately in art in
Philadelphia and
attended the
Pennsylvania Academy of
the Fine Arts in
1861-65, but she
preferred learning on
her own and in 1866
traveled to Europe to
study. Her first major
showing was at the Paris
Salon of 1872; four more
annual Salon exhibitions
followed.
In 1874 Cassatt chose
Paris as her permanent
residence and
established her studio
there. She shared with
the Impressionists an
interest in experiment
and in using bright
colours inspired by the
out-of-doors. Edgar
Degas became her friend;
his style and that of
Gustave Courbet inspired
her own. Degas was known
to admire her drawing
especially, and at his
request she exhibited
with the Impressionists
in 1879 and joined them
in shows in 1880, 1881,
and 1886. Like Degas,
Cassatt showed great
mastery of drawing, and
both artists preferred
unposed asymmetrical
compositions. Cassatt
also was innovative and
inventive in exploiting
the medium of pastels.
Initially, Cassatt
was a figure painter
whose subjects were
groups of women drinking
tea or on outings with
friends. After the great
exhibition of Japanese
prints held in Paris in
1890, she brought out
her series of 10
coloured prints-e.g.,
Woman Bathing and The
Coiffure-in which the
influence of the
Japanese masters Utamaro
and Toyokuni is
apparent. In these
etchings, combining
aquatint, dry point, and
soft ground, she brought
her printmaking
technique to perfection.
Her emphasis shifted
from form to line and
pattern. Soon after 1900
her eyesight began to
fail, and by 1914 she
had ceased working. The
principal motif of her
mature and perhaps most
familiar period is
mothers caring for small
children, e.g., The Bath
(La Toilette, c. 1892;
Art Institute of
Chicago).
Cassatt urged her
wealthy American friends
and relatives to buy
Impressionist paintings,
and in this way, more
than through her own
works, she exerted a
lasting influence on
American taste. She was
largely responsible for
selecting the works that
make up the H.O.
Havemeyer Collection in
the Metropolitan Museum
of Art, New York City.