Tuesday, July 2, 2024

The Tumultuous Friendship Between Mary Cassatt and Edgar Degas

 From ArtNet:

In 1875, Mary Cassatt was strolling along Boulevard Haussmann when a pastel drawing in a shop window caught her attention. “It changed my life,” the American expatriate would later say. “I saw art then as I wanted to see it.” The pastel was by Edgar Degas, already a prominent figure in the Parisian art scene, and all the more so following his part in the debut Impressionist exhibition a year earlier.

Cassatt was no slouch herself. Barred from enrolling in the École des Beaux-Arts, she’d been taught privately by its masters on-and-off since arriving in the French capital in 1866, although the Franco-Prussian War got in the way. By 1875, she had exhibited five times at the Paris Salon. As chance would have it, Degas had admired Cassatt’s 1874 entry, an oil painting depicting enigmatic woman wrapped in a green-gold shawl, and is said to have told the artist Joseph-Gabriel Tourny, “here is someone who feels as I do.”

His intuition was correct: in 1877, Tourny introduced the two, thereby launching a fast and intense friendship. Despite a 10-year age gap and having grown up on different continents, the pair had much in common. Both came from affluent banking families, both were unmarried, and, most importantly, both were hungry to explore a new type of painting. (Read more.)
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