Mary Cassatt at Work in Philadelphia - Art History News - by Bendor Grosvenor

Mary Cassatt at Work in Philadelphia

May 16 2024

Image of Mary Cassatt at Work in Philadelphia

Picture: Yale University Press

Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:

The Philadelphia Museum of Art will be opening an exhibition dedicated to Mary Cassatt (1844-1926) in two days' time. The show is being shared with The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco and already has a rather nicely produced catalogue to go alongside it.

According to the museum's website:

A celebrated member of the French Impressionists, Pennsylvania-born Mary Cassatt challenged the conventional expectations of Philadelphia’s elite. In Paris, Cassatt committed herself to a career as a professional artist and made the social, intellectual, and working lives of modern women a core subject of her prints, paintings, and pastels. Though recognized in her lifetime for her intimate depictions of women and children, Cassatt has yet to be appreciated for her serious engagement with the realities of gender and labor in her portrayal of other traditionally feminine activities, such as embroidery, reading, or making social appearances.

These depictions lie at the heart of Mary Cassatt at Work, which will present over 130 diverse works that follow the artist’s evolving practice and demonstrate her interest in the “serious work” of artmaking. The exhibition will present new findings about the materials she used and her processes—which were advanced for her era—as it coincides with a detailed technical study of the Philadelphia Museum of Art’s significant Cassatt holdings.

The exhibition will run until 8th September 2024.

Notice to "Internet Explorer" Users

You are seeing this notice because you are using Internet Explorer 6.0 (or older version). IE6 is now a deprecated browser which this website no longer supports. To view the Art History News website, you can easily do so by downloading one of the following, freely available browsers:

Once you have upgraded your browser, you can return to this page using the new application, whereupon this notice will have been replaced by the full website and its content.