Mary Cassatt’s Little Girl in a Large Red Hat
Mary Cassatt is triply distinguished as among the greatest American artists, the greatest artists of the nineteenth century, and one of the finest female painters of the Western tradition. Little Girl in a Large Red Hat, completed at the early peak of her career, as she fully assimilated the Impressionist idiom that was to inform her strongest work, is a small masterpiece of painterly characterization, depicting the artist’s signature subject with a deft acumen in an altogether compelling composition.
To begin, what does Pollock mean by confrontation, a curious word to describe the thirty-seven-year-old artist’s encounter with an eight- or nine-year-old girl, who appears to be, as her only sketchily rendered setting and attire suggest, of the same bourgeois background as her portrayer? Perhaps she intends that Cassatt’s subject is engaged by the artist as just that—as a thoughtful, perceiving person of depth and interiority—rather than superficially as an object, in the prevailing manner of contemporary Victorian images of especially female children on both sides of the Atlantic.
Mary Stevenson Cassatt was born into comfortable circumstances outside Pittsburgh in 1844 but spent most of her life in France. Following study at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia, she moved to Paris in 1866 and became a student of the academic artist Jean-Léon Gérôme. After exhibiting several times at the Salon, she was invited in 1877 by the older artist Edgar Degas—who became a close friend, mentor, and collaborator—to join the Impressionist exhibitions, which she did in 1879–81 and 1886 as the lone American in the group. Her work in the Impressionist style continued into the late 1880s, when elements of Post-Impressionism, and later Realism and Classicism, successively informed her practice, which remained focused on portrayals of women and children, often together.
Little Girl in a Large Red Hat was probably completed quickly, and it incorporates a desired tension between finished head and sketchy, more painterly body and background, an emerging hallmark of the artist’s style. It is nonetheless a sophisticated image, its underlying structure—the series of inverted red V shapes formed successively by loose and looped ribbon, the girl’s upper lip and flushed cheeks, and the brim and body of her hat, complemented by the overarching X-shaped architecture of the picture as a whole—all serving to bolster the girl’s presence and solidity, despite the figure’s adumbrated facture. In focusing on the subject’s head as opposed to her body, Cassatt intended that this girl, and others like her, be apprehended in terms of thoughts and mind, not fashion or flesh. A staunch supporter of women’s abilities and rights, Cassatt invested the painting with her belief in the compelling individuality of the girl, offering a portent of her future potential and agency.
Karl Kusserow
John Wilmerding Curator of American Art