Mary CASSATT

American Impressionist painter Mary Cassatt (1844-1926) achieved a unique status in the 19th-century French art world, dominated by men. Her 40-year friendship with Edgar Degas was formative and crucial to her early career. He persuaded her to stop striving for the status quo acceptance of the Paris Salon and instead exhibit with the Impressionists. The strong graphic quality and negative space of her printmaking practice reflect the prevalent Japanese influence of that time. Her tender depictions of mothers and children have made her work perennially popular. In her last days, as her eyesight failed, she was a champion for women's suffrage.

Mary Cassatt - Helene of Septeuil or Enfant au Perroquet - detail
$4,800

Child with a Parrot

CASSATT, Mary

Hélène of Septeuil or Enfant au Perroquet Drypoint on laid Van Gelder paper, c. 1890. Reference: Breeskin 134. Very likely a fourth state of five, ...

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