The Bath by Mary Cassatt - 1891/1891 - 9.625 x 12.375 in National Museum of Women in the Arts The Bath by Mary Cassatt - 1891/1891 - 9.625 x 12.375 in National Museum of Women in the Arts

The Bath

Aquatint, Drypoint on paper, Soft-ground etching • 9.625 x 12.375 in
  • Mary Cassatt - May 22, 1844 - June 14, 1926 Mary Cassatt 1891/1891

March is Women's History Month! We present today's masterpiece thanks to the National Museum of Women in the Arts.

In 1890, the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris held a large-scale exhibition of Japanese prints that strengthened Mary Cassatt’s interest in printmaking. The exhibition inspired her to create a series of ten color aquatints. The Bath is the first print in the series and derives from an extensive group of related works of mothers and children.

Japanese art influenced not only Cassatt’s choice of subject matter but also her technique and composition. Japanese woodblock prints commonly depicted women bathing children.

Cassatt’s woman and child are neither clearly European nor Asian. She rendered the figures and tub as two-dimensional shapes. Indeed, she almost completely eliminated the traditional shading and tonal variations that create the illusion of depth in Western art.

Cassatt, a prolific artist who created more than 220 prints during her career, produced The Bath in 17 editions; the National Museum of Women in the Arts owns a final impression.