HONOLULU.- The Honolulu Museum of Art (HoMA) showcases the only American included among French Impressionists in Mary Cassatt at Work, on view June 21-Oct. 12. The exhibition invites visitors on a captivating journey through Cassatts six-decade career with 30 paintings, pastels and prints along with the famed artists personal correspondence that offer insight into her experiences making a living through art. A visually radical artist, she helped shape the Impressionist movement and transformed the course of modern art, using materials and processes that pushed the creative boundaries of her era.
Maternal Caress, 1896. Oil on canvas. Philadelphia Museum of Art: Bequest of Aaron E. Carpenter, 1970.
Mary Cassatt at Work explores the artists activity across media, revealing the daring methods she used to give form to her ideas.
Among the objects on view in the exhibition are eight works from HoMAs collection. Featuring prints, pastels and oils, HoMAs collection underscores her enduring commitment to innovation. HoMAs relationship with Cassatt dates to the Museums founding. In addition to eight works from HoMAs collection, the exhibition includes 21 objects on loan from the Philadelphia Museum of Art and one from a private collection.
Petite Fille Assise Dans une Bergère Jaune (Young Girl Seated in a Yellow Armchair), c. 1902. Pastel on paper. Honolulu Museum of Art: Bequest of Kathryn and Arthur Murry (26336).
Mary Cassatt has been a part of the museum since it opened in 1927, said HoMA director and CEO Halona Norton-Westbrook. Just as the Honolulu Museum of Art shares the best of Hawaiis art with the world, for almost 100 years it has also been bringing the world to Hawaii. It is a wonderful parallel to celebrate the work of a groundbreaking female artist at a museum that was founded by an equally forward-thinking woman.
Jeune Fille au Corsage Rose Clair (Young Woman with Auburn Hair in a Pink Blouse),1895. Pastel on paper. Honolulu Museum of Art: Bequest of Kathryn and Arthur Murray, 1997 (26337)
Cassatts The Banjo Lesson (1893) was among the core group of works gifted to the museum by founder Anna Rice Cooke. The drypoint, considered modern for that era, reflects the popularity of banjo playing among middle- and upper-class women of that time. In The Childs Caress, (1891) a tender moment between mother and child highlights the female role of nurturer and primary caretaker.
Woman in a Loge, 1879. Oil on canvas. Philadelphia Museum of Art: Bequest of Charlotte Dorrance Wright, 1978.
Cassatt is best known for her depictions of women and children. Mary Cassatt at Work offers a serious window into the social, intellectual, domestic and working lives of women and delves into issues of class, rarely discussed when examining Cassatts work. The exhibition also explores Cassatts role in bringing to the forefront the invisible work of women, making it a perceptible, serious object of study. Her work highlights roles traditionally assigned to women, including caregiving, nursing, social labor and performing music. Cassatt meticulously presents these roles through intimate marks of her brush, etching needle, pastel stick and fingertips.
The show also illustrates Cassatts exceptional draftsmanship and her innovative printmaking. Inspired by Japanese woodblock prints, Cassatt drew from the colors and patterns she saw in Japanese art and used Western technique to pioneer a new method of printing. HoMA's exceptional collection of Japanese printsone of the largest outside of Japanoffers a rare glimpse into the cross-cultural dialogue that inspired Cassatt's groundbreaking work in color printmaking.
The Letter, 1890-1891. Color drypoint and aquatint on laid paper, third state of three. Philadelphia Museum of Art: Bequest of Aaron E. Carpenter, 1970
The exhibition is accompanied by a full-color catalogue that will be available in the HoMA Shop.