Thursday, September 23, 2021

Intersecting Lives: Two Female Impressionist Painters

Impressionist portraits of Mary Cassatt (l) & Berthe Morisot (r)
Some time ago I promised to do a comparison of two female painters who were contemporaries, and sometimes competitors, in Paris in the late 1800's. The American artist was Mary Cassatt and the native French artist was Berthe Morisot, who is less well-known in the United States.

Maternity, Mary Cassatt
In gathering information about the two of them, I encountered some discussion on the painting of children — one of Mary's specialties — from early times to the present. I considered touching on that subject briefly before turning to my two "principals", which led me to thinking about my own artwork regarding children and how I achieved relaxed, un-posed sketches. So, before this project got completely out of hand, I decided to save those topics for a later post.



Mary Cassatt, self-portrait
Mary Cassatt was born near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1844. She was the daughter of a wealthy banker, with whom she had a contentious relationship throughout their lives.  After attending the prestigious Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, she toured Europe, visiting France, Italy, Spain and Holland.  Always interested in art, she studied the work of the Old Masters, even paying for private lessons at the Louvre. When the prestigious Salon finally allowed women to submit work for showing, Cassatt was one of the first two American women whose work was accepted in 1868. (In deference to her father’s violent opposition to Mary becoming a professional artist, she entered her work under the name “Mary Stevenson”.) She returned home to Pennsylvania in 1870 to escape the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War in Europe.

Degas, sculpture of a dancer
Chafing under her father’s refusal to support her artistic endeavors in any form, and her inability to sell her work in the U.S. due to the social mores of the time, in 1872 she returned to Paris for further study. She especially admired the work of Edgar Degas, known for his paintings of the ballet. He saw one of her works at the Paris Salon of 1874.  Both preferred detailed sketches to painting and Degas recognized her considerable ability.  They finally met in 1877, and began a friendship that was to last for many years. Although he was never her teacher, he made many useful suggestions and encouraged her to drop the conventional studies she felt dull and confining.



Cassatt, Mother Combing Her Child's Hair
At Degas's urging, she began to exhibit her work with the Impressionists.  Thereafter she devoted herself to subjects which reflected her interests, especially domestic scenes, children. and gardens.  Although Mary seems to have forsaken any interest in marrying and having a family of her own, she is probably best known for her paintings of mothers and their children.  She also painted ordinary people doing ordinary things.  Mary once claimed that she could paint an attractive picture of an unattractive subject.  And, as Sister Wendy Beckett, who chose two of Cassatt's paintings for her book of 1,000 masterpieces remarked, "After all, that's almost a definition of art." Both Cassatt and Degas broke away from the Impressionists in 1882, but she returned later and he continued to stay in touch with artists both in and out of the Impressionists.

Mary Cassatt, The Letter
Among her other influences were Japanese woodcuts, which were popular at the time. She tried very hard to interest other Americans who studied in or visited France in the work of the Impressionists, buying many of their works for herself, her family, and her friends.  She remained close friends with Degas. The two artists had similar social backgrounds and intellectual tastes.  She posed for several of his paintings. From 1912 onward she gradually lost her sight — as did Degas — and had to give up painting, though she continued to promote the work of younger American female artists and other suffragist causes.  On July 11, 1926, she died at a chateau near Beauvais, France.



Berthe Morisot, self-portrait
Berthe Morisot was born in 1841 in Bourges, France.  Her father, who had studied architecture, was an important government official.  Her mother had family connections to the important Rococo painter Jean-Honoré Fragonard. The family moved to Paris while Berthe was just a child. It was decided that all three sisters should have some training in art, while their brother followed their father's profession. The girls were taken to the Louvre, where they were introduced to the work of great artists from around the world.  One of the sisters left the group early, but the other two continued copying the works of the masters. They had to have a chaperone, were forbidden to speak to anyone,  and were refused entrance to certain exhibits. As she later did as a professional artist, Berthe made many quick sketches of everything that attracted her attention. This habit was useful to her later in her painting career because she could, for example, work on realistic spring or summer scenes even in the dead of winter.  Berthe had determined at an early age that she would make a career of being an artist, not just a hobby. After she finished working at the Louvre, she studied briefly with traditional teachers, but found the work unsatisfactory and moved on.

The Louvre

The Paris Salon held an annual juried art show. It was a government-sponsored body that housed the show, which was judged by the members of the Academy des Beau Arts.  Women were not at that time permitted to show their work. However, there was a special provision set up to thank the artists and others who worked at the Louvre.  Berthe was allowed to participate in that and received a certificate and other honors. She was promised a spot in that category for at least the next six years.   Women were eventually allowed to compete at the larger salon event.

Landscape sketch by Corot
From 1862 to 1868, she studied with Jean-Batiste Camille Corot, cementing a friendship which lasted for many years.  The first thing Corot, who was both a landscape painter and a figure painter, did was to make sure she became a plein-aire painter. That is, she learned to do her sketching and painting outdoors in the "plain air". This gave her painting a freer and more colorful approach and she often recommended it to other artists. (For more about the influence of Corot — whose paintings "hooked" me on art when I was a child — and his contemporaries, see our posts of February 19, 2018 and May 14, 2020.)

Morisot, Mother and Son in a Boat
When the Paris Salon finally opened to women,  Berthe entered the competition for most of the next decade, but refused to enter in one year's Salon because one of her paintings had been partially painted over by the judges without her knowledge or agreement.  Degas and other friends urged her to join with the Impressionists in a show that they had put together.  She did so, was very well received, and made many more friends. She did return to the Salon, but continued in her participation with the Impressionists. She single-handedly put together their first large exposition, as she would do again for their last one in 1886. Soon she was spoken of as the first female Impressionist. (There were others. You know about Cassatt. If you are interested in others, here are a few names: Marie Braquemond,  Eva Gonzales, Cecelia Beaux, Lilla Cabot Perry.)

Manet's La Repos, feat. Berthe
Berthe met Edouard Manet in 1868 and they quickly struck up a working relationship,  criticizing each other's work and giving advice which improved both of their paintings. Manet painted her portrait several times; she introduced him to outdoor painting, which improved his over-all painting. In 1872 a prominent dealer bought a number of her paintings and quickly sold most of them.  From that time on she sold her work regularly and made more money than many of her male Impressionist friends as well as her Salon competitors. She won over many of the critics who had judged her harshly. In addition to her own painting, she modeled for many other artists. She was a beautiful woman, tall and graceful with glossy dark hair and luminous eyes. But if you look carefully at the paintings, you will see that she often was not smiling and that there was a sadness or frustration in her demeanor. She once wrote that no man had ever treated her as an equal and that distinction was all she wanted from them.  She was her own most severe critic,  seldom satisfied with her work.

Eugene Manet and His Daughter, by Morisot
In 1874 she married Manet's younger brother Eugene, a writer and painter. He gave up those pursuits to manage her affairs and give her more time to paint. In 1877 they welcomed their only child, Julie. After becoming a mother, Berthe painted numerous pictures of children, her own and her nieces and nephews.  The paintings seemed to give her great pleasure and she was not as critical about them as she was about her other work.  Most of her paintings and prints were small. She experimented with watercolors, charcoal, colored pencils, pastels, even a bit of engraving. She had studied sculpture, but none of hers survived.  She was most successful when she did her central motifs in chalk or pencil, overlaid with watercolors, surrounded by bright backgrounds done in oils.

Sketch of Julie by Morisot
Edouard Manet died suddenly in 1883.  Eugene's health began to fail.  Berthe had her first solo exhibition in 1892, but her world was to come to a shocking halt in that same year when Eugene died suddenly.  It was difficult for Berthe to continue working at her usual pace after she became a widow and single mother. In 1895 Julie became very ill with influenza during an epidemic.  Berthe managed to nurse her back to health, but contracted the disease herself and quickly became ill with pneumonia, dying a few days later and leaving her daughter an orphan at 16.

So, there we have the stories of the lives of two influential female artists whose life journeys were very similar in some ways and very different in others, but intersected in the brief height of the Impressionist movement in France. They must have been acquainted; they certainly each were aware of the other’s work. Were they friends? Were they rivals? The answer is somewhat complicated.

Berthe Morisot, Le Berceau
Some writers have reported that Berthe was put off in her first introduction to Mary, whether because of her brusque American manner, her uncompromising suffragist attitudes, or her uncultured and clumsy French. (Or, most probably, some combination of those.) And they were each drawn to different factions among the male Impressionists — who were never as united as art historians would have you believe. But things changed as both women matured and moved on from the fading Impressionist movement. While never ‘BFF’s’, they developed an easy, cordial relationship, even studying together briefly in the last year before Berthe’s untimely death.

Mary Cassat, Summertime
After both had passed away, their reputations looked to diverge even more strangely than their lives: Mary, the ex-patriot American who staunchly refused to be labeled as anything except an independent woman and professional artist became the icon of women in the French Impressionist school. Berthe, first of the female Impressionists, and critically and commercially more successful than the majority of her male colleagues, seemed fated to become just a footnote in the history of Impressionism anywhere outside her native France.

Except for ….

Sketch of Julie by Renoir
Julie Manet, Berthe’s only child, orphaned at 16 did not lack for resources. Between her family connections and the good will Berthe inspired among her colleagues, it seemed as though the entire arts community of belle epoque France was determined to ride to her rescue. The famous poet Mallarmé became her guardian, and she went to live, comfortably, among her many cousins. She never lacked financial or emotional support.



Renoir, portrait of Julie Manet
Julie herself seemed determined to follow in her mother’s footsteps. Like Berthe, she modeled for artists of a number of schools — most notably Pierre-Auguste Renoir. Like Berthe, she became an artist in her own right. And like her mother, she married into yet another well-known family of artists, becoming the bride of Ernest Rouart, second son of the Impressionist Henri Rouart. Furthermore, like Berthe, she tended to accumulate art: works she inherited, gifts from admirers, her own and her husband’s unsold pieces, and purchases from friends and needy colleagues.



Portrait of Julie Manet, Painting - Ernest Rouart

Unlike her mother, however, Julie Manet Rouart managed to raise three children. And, most unlike Berthe, she survived not only the “Beautiful Era” of 19th century France but also two World Wars and nearly two-thirds of the 20th century! She eventually passed away at a fine old age of 88, in Paris in 1966.  Her son, Julien, endowed the Marmottan Monet Museum in Paris with much of her remaining art collection.

But it was as a writer, like both her father and her guardian, that Julie achieved her greatest fame. In 1987, twenty years after her death, her estate released the diaries she kept from age 10 until her marriage to Ernest for editing and publication as Growing Up with the Impressionists, which included not only her childhood remembrances of her parents and their friends, but also candid accounts of dinner-table conversations between various artists both before and after her parents’ deaths. It has remained in print in various editions and translations up to the present day — and is at least partly responsible for a re-examination of Berthe’s work and her eventual recognition as one of the finest female Impressionist artists.






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Thursday, September 9, 2021

Bittersweet and Snow-in-Summer: The Autumnal Equinox


Bulletin:  The NWS confirms the  September Autumnal (Fall) Equinox arrives in Montrose, Colorado, USA on September 22, 2021, at 1:21 PM, MDT.

American bittersweet
I was born a few minutes after midnight on September 21st, in the midst of a violent  equinoctal storm.  Such storms are not unusual around the autumn equinox.  Since I was born within the 24 hours of the day of the equinox (you don’t need to know the year!), I always counted it as part of my birthday and have a special fondness for its folklore and celebrations. It is in many ways a bitter/sweet time as the days shorten and the nights grow cold. It is a time to look back and a time to look forward. Welcome to my favorite time of the year.
                                                  -  Annake


This equinox occurs in the autumn in the Northern Hemisphere, at the same time the Southern Hemisphere is welcoming Spring. See our post for March 17, 2021, "Spring Things", for a discussion of the Spring Equinox in the Northern Hemisphere.  A number of places have similar celebrations on both occasions.

During the Equinox, the sun passes what we call the "celestial equator".  This is an imaginary extension of Earth's equator out into space, through the sun, and beyond.  The equinox occurs precisely when the center of the Sun passes through that line from North to South.  It passes from South to North for the Spring (Vernal) Equinox.  The word equinox comes from the Latin word aequus, meaning equal. and the word nox, meaning night.  This indicates a time when day and night are of equal length, but that isn't what really happens.  

Monarch butterfly
For one thing, the sun is measured precisely from the time the outer edge appears just above the horizon.   But he edge of the sun can actually be seen before this time because Earth's atmosphere refracts the light.   Also the day isn't considered over until the sun has completely set and the edge has disappeared below the horizon, even though there can still be some light and color in the sky.  So there is always more sunlight by a few minutes than there is darkness.  The sun continues down the curvature of the Earth from North to South America.  The real miracle, I believe, is that our migratory birds and migrating butterflies like the Monarchs  follow this same line to find their way to their homes for the rest of their year,  many by ways we don't yet understand.

All this celestial movement causes remarkable effects at specific places on the globe at the time of the equinox.  Even  in very ancient times, people who studied the sky were aware of this and frequently included rituals showcasing the effects in their rituals. Some cultures built massive stone edifices to celebrate the celestial movements. The massive stone features of Stonehenge in England have a history stretching back 4,500 years and have featured ceremonies and worship by many diverse civilizations during that time.  We know that it acted to show features like the equinoxes and solstices, planting and harvesting seasons, and similar dates important to the people.  Only recently has it been discovered that it can be used to calculate a celestial occurrence which only happens every 47 years!   The most important viewing happens at dawn of the day following the equinox when crowds of people wait patiently in the dark, awaiting the rising of the sun. Later there are all kinds of celebration with many people dressed in colorful costumes representing both historical and mythological figures.
Sunrise at Stonehenge



At Chitzen Itza in Mexico,  an ancient monument whose name translates to "The Hitching Post of the Sun", has been a the center of a celebration at both the spring and autumn equinoxes for centuries. It is a popular tourist attraction for guests from around the world.  The high point of the ceremony comes when a stream of light that represents a great serpent slithers down the pyramid from top to bottom. (See our Spring equinox post.) The surrounding area provides opportunities to enjoy food, music, dancing and other delights.  Be advised, however, that many of the celebrations that we mention in this article will not be held this year because of the pandemic.  Plans are already being made for 2022 or 2023.

In ancient Greece the autumn equinox was associated with Persephone, the daughter of Zeus, who after spending the spring and summer with her parents on Earth, returned to her husband in the Underworld  at this time and lived with him for the rest of the year.  Pomegranates were one of her favorite foods and so became known as ‘The Fruit of the Underworld.’  They are still eaten to honor her even today. (I  used to ask for one instead of the traditional orange in the toe of my Christmas stocking.)  If you like, you can celebrate by eating a ripe pomegranate or drinking canned or bottled juice.


Viewing autumn foliage is a great passion here in the United States and Canada.  New England is famous for its colorful autumns.   Thousands of people visit the area for the annual "leaf peeping". Ontario, Canada even has an aerial tour to view red maple, yellow poplar, and white birch. Here in the Rocky Mountains we are very proud of our colorful aspens. Here is a picture of some of them.



But most people have the wrong idea about what causes the change of colors and when that actually happens.  Many people believe that the leaves change and/or drop off because of the autumn weather conditions. But the change actually started much earlier in the year.  Remember that the days have been gradually shorteing since the Summer solstice, the longest day of the year.  (See our post about the Summer solstice here.)   As the days shorten there is less and less sunlight to provide the energy for leaves to make food. Eventually there is not enough chlorophyll for the leaves to retain their green color and photosynthesis stops.   The leaves change color and most fall to the ground.  If there is a heavy frost too early in the season, as there was here last September,  many dead leaves may hang from the tree until new buds form the following spring.


Ways to Celebrate the Equinox with Children
 
  • If there is still a Farmer's Market in your area, visit it and choose some varieties of produce that you don't see at the supermarket.  Look for fruits and vegetables that may be new to your family.
  • Have fun getting ‘lost’ in a corn maze.
  • Take the children to pick apples or choose a pumpkin to make pumpkin pie.  (It's all right if they don’t want to have their pumpkin cut up.)
  • Get the children together and have them help you decorate the house in autumn colors symbols: cattails, branches with bright autumn leaves, cornstalks, autumn flowers (asters, sunflowers, chrysanthemums), maybe a scarecrow.
  • Go on a nature walk.
  • Show the children how to press colorful autumn leaves and use a guidebook to identify them.
  • If you are near the ocean and the area is safe for children, go beach-combing for shells and "buried treasure".
  • Visit a local zoo. Many have special programs this time of year.
  • Rake leaves into a pile and let the children jump into it. Do some jumping yourself, it's good for you. Finish the cleanup.
  • Visit a bookstore or library and look for books and storybooks that have autumn themes.
  • Learn an autumn poem by someone like Robert Frost or James Whitcomb Riley. Or write a poem of your own.  There are also beautiful (and short) poems in haiku. Read some, write some.
  • Have a family sing-along.
  • Concoct your own original pumpkin treat.

Moon Festivals are popular in in China and Vietnam.  These are harvest celebrations.  They are not celebrated on the equinox itself but on the first Full Moon after the equinox. (This year that will be October first.)  Brightly-lit lanterns are a big part of the festival.  Vietnamese children wear colorful masks.  People celebrate by giving Moon Cakes to family and friends.  These are said to be delicious pastries with lotus-seed paste, sesame seeds, duck eggs or dried fruit inside. (Here in the USA it is a custom in several southern states to give Moon Pies in the same fashion.)  There is a somewhat similar holiday called Chuseok in Korea.  The Japanese like to visit beautiful  gardens jn the autumn.  Japanese Buddhists clean the graves of their ancestors and decorate them with flowers during the week of the equinox.  They honor the setting of the sun as they look to the West, where they believe  the land of the afterlife is located.
Zen garden in autumn
In this country, Native American celebrations of the autumn equinox are important.  Many of these are closed to the public, but some generously allow visitors. You can make a pilgrimage to the ancient observatory in Chaco Canyon, New Mexico.  You can watch how light passes through the spirals that the ancient Anasazi people carved on slabs of stone and watch make complex designs in rock art. Nighttime sky watching helps you see the constellations that the ancients saw and named.
Chaco Culture National Heritage Site

The Museum of Northern Arizona, at the base of the San Francisco Mountains, rests on land belonging collectively to many tribes. Each year they produce the Fall Heritage festival, featuring the art and craftwork of many tribes. This year it has been canceled because of the pandemic, but plans are being made for 2022 and 2023.  (You can find them online.)

The tribes in many parts of the country have harvest celebrations, featuring traditional foods, especially corn, which has a special significance.   Full moon celebrations honor the changes in daylight.  You may see honor paid to each of the directions because all have influences in weather, light, winds, and other features of life.  You will probably hear thanks given to the plants that provide food, medicine,  shelter,  and other necessities of life. All of these are ancient traditions.  The drums and chants are an extremely important and exciting part of any celebrations, as are the traditional dances, which have special meanings. If you ask questions seriously and politely, you will either get an answer or be told that that information is not disclosed outside the tribe. Remember that the indigenous peoples had vast civilizations on both the North and South American continents for thousands of years before other peoples came along. This is  a bittersweet time for them when ‘holidays’ like Columbus Day, and Thanksgiving often demean them  and propagate untruths about their cultures.  If you cannot go to them with an open mind and an open heart, don't go.  And parents, please do not dress your children as phony ‘Indians’ at Halloween. You are doing a disservice to both the children and the indigenous cultures.


A Message from Annake for Parents with Troubled Children

 I taught at all levels for fifty years on three different continents and observed children of all ages in many kinds of crisis.  I must say that I am extremely alarmed about the current state of mental health of children of all ages, but especially pre-teens and teenagers, since the advent of the pandemic.

There is a practice from Denmark called Kyggkogck, performed as the days shorten and darken. Families gather to discuss everything that happened in the past year, good and bad.  Good things are celebrated, and plans are made to avoid or ameliorate the bad things in the coming year. I highly recommend something similar to parents, perhaps somewhat modified, in this pandemic era.

Sit down as a family and discuss the good and bad things that happened to your family during the past season (or year).  Be honest.  Don't "sugar-coat" anything. Really listen to your children.  Sometimes it takes a lot of effort to find out what is really bothering them.  Take note of what they agree were good things so that you can build on them.  Plan together how to make things better in the future. It is helpful if parents show a united front even though they may not always agree.

One approach is to talk about things they would like to do or have done about their rooms, especially if those rooms are shared. (I once threatened to stretch barbed wire down the middle of my sons' room!)  Some children may need more privacy, or different times or parts of the house for doing things like practicing musical instruments.  Or one may just need more quiet than another.  Sometimes a partition  (but not barbed wire!) is the answer.  Even painting the sides of the room in two different colors may work.

Mixing ages can bring other problems. I know of a family with two girls just about a year apart in age and a third three years younger.  The two oldest shared a room and the youngest had a small room of her own.  There was constant friction between the two older girls. Moving the youngest girl in with the oldest one and giving the middle girl a room of her own made everyone happier.  You may have to try several different solutions, and it is good to have a rule that each person's belongings are to be left strictly alone.
                                                                                                                    
Bless you if you have none of these problems or have solved them all. Keep trying if you have not. Autumn tends to be a melancholy time for any number of reasons, so that is something to deal with and watch for. If you are a person reading this who lives alone, you can practice Kyggkogck on your own, but it can be wrenching and it is much better to have a friend, relative, or counselor with you when you do.
 
I want to leave you with some of the beautiful flowers that brighten the season.  By this time of year,  many of the flowers are Composites like asters,  daisies,  chrysanthemums and sunflowers.  These are really two flowers blended into one. One of them provides the showy petals that attract bees, butterflies, even bats.  The other half are pollinated by these visitors and produce the central seeds.  Botanists believe these flowers, along with orchids, are relatively new-comers to the plant world.  They have certainly beautified the place.   We will leave you with a bouquet of our favorites.

Best Wishes and Good Luck,



Clockwise from top left: sunflowers, daisies, asters, chrysanthemuns




 

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