Lot Essay
Executed in 1913, After Baby's Bath incorporates all of the attributes which made the mother and child theme successful for Mary Cassatt throughout her career. Cassatt ingeniously created a modern version of the age-old theme that appealed to the public and and allowed her to explore new techniques, compositions and media. Mothers and children began to appear seperately in Cassatt's earliest work. After they began to appear together, they reappeared until the very end of Cassatt's career. Nancy Mathews has noted that "once Cassatt had incorporated the mother and child theme into her oeuvre she tended to treat it in a serial manner as her colleagues, from Monet to Eugène Carrière, were doing with their favorite subjects... In fact, she may not have intended to return to the theme after the initial series but did so under the dual pressures of critical praise and a favorable market after its success established the motif so firmly as her hallmark." (Mary Cassatt, New York, 1987, p. 75)
After Baby's Bath is one of Cassatt's simplest compositions, and is among her most successful. The composition is powerful and uncomplicated by unnecessary elements. The mother's posture, as she leans slightly toward the child, and the child's snug fit in her mother's arms, subtly speak of the universal relationship between mothers and children. Yet the bold color choices and thick application of pastel instill the work with an unexpectedly daring tone. Mrs. Havemeyer, one of Cassatt's most loyal patrons, felt that works such as this "displayed 'strong drawing, great freedom of technique, and a supreme mastery of color'" (E. J. Bullard, Mary Cassatt Oils and Pastels, New York, 1972, p. 84).
That Cassatt's pastels of mothers and children were successfully selling until the end of her career is a testament to the theme, as well as the artist's talent for bringing a new element to its every rendition.
This pastel will be included in the Cassatt Committee's revision of Adelyn Dohme Breeskin's catalogue raisonné of the works of Mary Cassatt.
After Baby's Bath is one of Cassatt's simplest compositions, and is among her most successful. The composition is powerful and uncomplicated by unnecessary elements. The mother's posture, as she leans slightly toward the child, and the child's snug fit in her mother's arms, subtly speak of the universal relationship between mothers and children. Yet the bold color choices and thick application of pastel instill the work with an unexpectedly daring tone. Mrs. Havemeyer, one of Cassatt's most loyal patrons, felt that works such as this "displayed 'strong drawing, great freedom of technique, and a supreme mastery of color'" (E. J. Bullard, Mary Cassatt Oils and Pastels, New York, 1972, p. 84).
That Cassatt's pastels of mothers and children were successfully selling until the end of her career is a testament to the theme, as well as the artist's talent for bringing a new element to its every rendition.
This pastel will be included in the Cassatt Committee's revision of Adelyn Dohme Breeskin's catalogue raisonné of the works of Mary Cassatt.