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1879

Woman in a Loge

Mary Stevenson Cassatt

American, 1844 - 1926

Cassatt created a series of theater scenes in the late 1870s, displaying an interest in city nightlife shared by many of the Impressionists. This work, showing a woman (often said to be her sister Lydia) seated in front of a mirror with the balconies of the Paris Opéra House reflected behind her, demonstrates the influence of Cassatt's friend Edgar Degas, particularly in the attention paid to the effects of artificial lighting on flesh tones. This painting was shown in Paris at the fourth Impressionist exhibition in 1879, where it was singled out for much praise.

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Resources

Custom Prints for "Woman with a Pearl Necklace in a Loge" (72182)

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The Moorish Chief

This painting was inspired by the people and architecture of Islamic North Africa and Spain but the painting itself is an imaginative fiction created by the artist.
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In the Loge

Teacher's Resource for Mary Cassatt's In the Loge
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Mary Stevenson Cassatt, Woman in a Loge, 1879 | Philadelphia Art Museum