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Young Girl at a Window, Mary Cassatt c 1883-84 (Corcoran Gallery of Art) |
French mademoiselle, imprisoned on her balcony...
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Sunlight, Frank W Benson, 1909 (Indianapolis Museum of Art) |
And Miss America some twenty years later.
From the
American Impressionism exhibition in Edinburgh which I greatly enjoyed yesterday.
Wonderful opportunity to see some American artists who are less well-known over here.
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Autumn, Mary Cassatt, 1880 (Musée des Beaux-Arts de la Ville de Paris, Petit Palais)
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Mary Cassatt also painted this portrait of her older sister Lydia who was already suffering from kidney disease and died in 1882 - although she looks so similar to the unnamed girl at a window (the puffiness of whose face could be a symptom?), that I wonder if they're the same person and it was finished after Lydia's death? In which case, of course, she's not a French mademoiselle and my caption, as well as my feminist art theories, are nonsense ... but never mind, it's still a stunning exhibition!
6 comments:
I love Mary Cassatts paintings, I've painted a copy of one of hers--two little girls on the beach.
If it's the one from Washington - two plump little girls with a bucket and spade - that's also in the exhibition, Janet. Lovely to have so many American loans.
They do look very similar. Did you see the Mary Cassatt prints at the National Gallery in 2006?
I think I missed that one, Lucille.
Despite growing up in Washington, I don't recognize the one from the Corcoran! Have just returned from the Degas/Cassatt exhibition at the National Gallery in Washington--really interesting exploration of their professional relationship. Now wishing I could make it up to Edinburgh too! x
I'd love to see that, Kristina - I love the little girl in the blue armchair. Don't think I'll make it to Washington but Edinburgh is do-able in a day (although I was whacked by the time I got home!) It's not a huge exhibition, though, if anyone's planning a special trip - four rooms of paintings.
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