Mary Cassatt: Paintings and Prints FROM THE PUBLISHER
These paintings and prints by the American artist are among the finest examples of Impressionism.
Mary Cassatt's paintings and prints have long been treasured as some of the finest examples of Impressionist art. A rebel by the Victorian standards of her time, Mary Cassatt moved from the art schools of staid Philadelphia to the boulevards of Paris, where the young Impressionist movement was flourishing. Degas, her friend and mentor, encouraged her involvement in the new art movement.
Cassatt's luminous, observant, and innovative works-chiefly interiors with women and children-helped define Impressionism and have been compared to Raphael's paintings for their beauty and dignity. Frank Getlein, noted art critic and historian, has selected 72 of Cassatt's finest works, each reproduced here in full color. His accompanying text relates the intimate details of her life to her paintings while clearly defining her relation to fellow artists and her place in modern art.
The publication of this book marks the first time that so many of Cassatt's paintings and prints, some rarely seen by American audiences, have been made available at a popular price.
Other Details: 72 full-color illustrations 156 pages 8 3/4 x 8 3/4" Published 1988
frame; two women sit in a garden. These women of all ages are beings in themselves. They do not exist, as so many women in art and literature do, for the sake of the male artist, or the male hero, or the male buyer.
So Cassatt is set apart not only from Abbott Thayer but also from such great painters of mothers and children as Raphael. Raphael was a greater artist than Mary Cassatt, and for that matter greater than all of the impressionists, but in one important respect the Victorian American woman accomplished things the Renaissance Italian man did not.
Mary Stevenson Cassatt was born on May 22, 1844, in Allegheny City, now a part of Pittsburgh. She was the fourth surviving child of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Simpson Cassatt. Her father made money in real estate and stock brokerage but refused to devote himself wholeheartedly to either. He was mayor of Allegheny City for a while and held other posts of municipal trust. When Mary was five, the family moved to Philadelphia, which all her life Mary regarded as her American base, presumably because her brothers Aleck and Gardner lived there. Two years later, the Cassatts moved to Paris.
We do not know exactly when Mary Cassatt determined that she wanted to be an artist, but it was very early. She saw Paris at the age of seven and it was love at first sight. Two years later the family moved on to Heidelberg, then to Darmstadt, to further the engineering studies of brother Aleck. Another brother, Robert, died in Darmstadt in 1855, and the family returned to Philadelphia, stopping in Paris to see the Universal Exposition, which included an international art exhibition dominated by Ingres and Delacroix. Outside the official, imperial precincts, Gustave Courbet exhibited his own pictures in his Pavilion of Realism. All of this must have made an impression on the eleven-year-old Mary.
Six years later, in the first year of the Civil War, she enrolled in the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, the country's most venerable and most revered art school. She stayed there four years, moving through the traditional curriculum of drawing from casts of antique sculpture, drawing from life, and copying paintings. Here she decided that copying Old Masters and studying their works was the best road to mastering art. In 1866, she moved to Paris, studied briefly in a studio conducted by an established artist, Charles Chaplin (no relation), and spent most of the next four years studying on her own in the museums, copying Old Masters, and making sketching trips in the country.
Just as the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War sent Monet and Pissarro to London, where they would encounter the nature paintings of Constable and Turner, it sent Mary Cassatt back to Philadelphia. When the war ended, she returned to Europe, settling in Parma to study Correggio and Parmagianino. While in Parma she also attended the Academy to study engraving. In 1872 she had a painting accepted in the Paris Salon and the following year settled permanently in Paris, after study trips to Spain and Belgium. She met Louisine Waldron Elder whom she persuaded to buy a Degas pastel. This was the first impressionist picture to come to America, and the first acquisition of what became the H. O. Havemeyer Collection, one of the great foundation blocks of the Metropolitan Museum of Art Collections.
For Mary Cassatt, however, the example of Degas, the precepts of Degas, and the friendship of Degas were more important than anything. When she met Degas and became his friend, she sealed her destiny as an artist. She had been accepted for five years in a row for the Paris Salon, but such was her admiration for Degas that at his invitation she abandoned the Salon, joined the independents and henceforth showed her work with themwhen they could agree on an exhibition.
Degas had a greater influence on Cassatt's work than Correggio, Parmagianino, or anyone else. In Degas's paintings and drawings, Mary Cassatt immediately recognized what she herself had been working toward. In turn, the older artist saw in her a possible disciple, a highly talented junior, an exotic American and yet, at the same time, a fellow citizen of the same social milieu. Degas came from a family of bankers, and hence from the same general occupational sphere inhabited by Mary Cassatt's real-estate speculating, stock-brokering father, her corporately and socially successful brothers. (Her brother Aleck had married Lois Buchanan, niece of President Buchanan, while Mary was in Paris before the Franco-Prussian War.) The similarity of background, against which, to some degree, both rebelled without ever repudiating it, gave them common ground neither ever found with more bohemian members of the independents. Both believed in the art of the museums, and were mistrustful of casting themselves adrift on the moment. In many ways, they were made for each other.
Artistically, that is, socially, and intellectually. There is no evidence that any sort of romantic liaison ever existed. Degas and Cassatt were both Independents in more than their group artistic affiliation. Both were a little quirky, quick to respond to real or fancied offense, sensitive to what was due them and what they need not accept, resentful of being put upon by anyone. In addition, both were tied up with their respective families: Degas underwent severe financial strain to pay off the debts incurred by the failure of the family bank in which he had no interest and certainly no managerial concern. And Mary's father and mother and sister Lydia joined her in Paris and lived with her most of their lives. Thus, the sheer mechanics of any clandestine relationship would have been formidable, had there been the desire. We can probably assume that there was not.
For some decades Mary Cassatt pursued her career successfully on both sides of the Atlantic at once. However, she suffered the loss, one by one, of family members who were dear to her, the loss of Degas in the middle of World War I, the dimming, eventual loss of her own eyesight, and the surrender of her lifetime of productive working habits. Toward the end, she even broke with her oldest friend, Louisine Havemeyer. She died in 1926.