Daring Methods: The Prints of Mary Cassatt

Prints and Stokes Galleries : March 1 – June 23, 2013

 

The Wertheim Study presents Sally Webster

 

Mary Cassatt, Women’s Suffrage, and

Chicago’s 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition

 

Mary Cassatt, who is best known for her enduring images of mother and children, is never thought of as a Bloomer girl or a free-love advocate. Yet in her 1893 mural Modern Woman she illustrated the most progressive and radical program of women's emancipation yet advanced. This program was first articulated in the 1848, “Declaration of Sentiments,” drawn up by women participants at the first convention of women's rights in Seneca Falls, New York. The organizer was Elizabeth Cady Stanton whose writings and speeches for the next half century changed the lives of thousands of women who sought professional training and the ability to lead independent lives. Stanton's accomplishments and that of other leading women's rights advocates were reflected in the art and displays placed in the Woman's Building at Chicago’s 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition. Among the most important was Cassatt’s mural located in the south tympanum of the building's Gallery of Honor.   Appropriately titled, Modern Woman, Cassatt’s mural was a contemporary allegory which she related in three panels: "Young Girls Pursuing Fame," "Young Women Plucking the Fruits of Knowledge or Science," and "The Arts, Music, Dancing." These panels, understood as symbolizing women's quest for knowledge and fame and their ability to function effectively apart from men, represented, collectively, the new ideals of modern women.  This paper will be illustrated with photographs of the Woman’s Building and Cassatt’s now-lost mural.

 

Sally Webster, a writer in residence in the Library’s Wertheim Study, is Professor Emerita of American Art at Lehman College and the Graduate Center, CUNY. An authority on public art, her most recent book is Eve’s Daughter/Modern Woman: A Mural by Mary Cassatt.

 

Daring Methods: The Prints of Mary Cassatt

 

American artist Mary Cassatt, best known for her paintings of women and children, was also a prolific printmaker. Although her subjects tend to be traditional, her approach to printmaking was bold. Daring Methods, which features nearly 80 works from 1879 to 1898, includes Cassatt’s sole lithograph, In the Theater, and other rare impressions. The prints are drawn almost entirely from the bequest of Samuel Putnam Avery, a late 19th-century collector and philanthropist who was acquainted with Cassatt and gave his large collection of prints to the Library.



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Clayton C. Kirking
Chief, Art Information Resources
New York Public Library
Stephen A. Schwarzman Building
476 Fifth Avenue, Room 313
New York, NY   10011
212 930 0722
212 930 0530 (fax)
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