Children Playing on the Beach by Mary Cassatt - 1884 - 97.4 x 74.2 cm National Gallery of Art Children Playing on the Beach by Mary Cassatt - 1884 - 97.4 x 74.2 cm National Gallery of Art

Children Playing on the Beach

oil on canvas • 97.4 x 74.2 cm
  • Mary Cassatt - May 22, 1844 - June 14, 1926 Mary Cassatt 1884

Today is Children's Day!  : )

One of the most famous artists portraying children was Mary Cassatt, the American artist working in Paris. When Cassatt exhibited this painting at the eighth and final impressionist exhibition in 1886, her reputation as a painter of mothers and children had been well established. Critics had long commented on her ability to portray her subjects in a tender, yet unsentimental, way: "Oh, my God! those babies! How those portraits have made my flesh crawl, time and again!—A whole passel of English and French smearers has painted them in such stupid, pretentious poses! . . . For the first time, thanks to Mlle. Cassatt, I have seen effigies of enchanting tots, calm and bourgeois scenes, painted with an utterly charming sort of delicate tenderness."

Cassatt's focus on a limited range of subjects allowed her to experiment with both the formal elements and painterly qualities of a composition. Her interest in Japanese prints and the process of printmaking can be seen in much of her work after 1883, including Children Playing on the Beach. In this work, Cassatt tightly cropped the scene, tilted the picture plane forward, and reduced the number of objects in the background to draw attention to the two little girls digging in the sand. Absorbed in their activity, they embody the naturalistic attitude prevalent in both art and literature of the time.

Aspects of the painting suggest that it is a nostalgic tribute to Cassatt's beloved sister, Lydia, who died in 1882. Cassatt was so distraught over Lydia's death that she did not paint for six months. Without revealing the identity of the little girls specifically, Cassatt depicted them in a manner that implies that they are related. Playing close together, the girls are comfortable with each other's presence. By positioning them side by side in nearly identical outfits, Cassatt established both a compositional and psychological relationship between the two figures.

P.S. See famous painters and their children here. We think that Joshua Reynolds’ are the cutest, you will find them here. <3