Leben und Werk. This art print displays sharp, vivid images with a high degree of color accuracy. (92.4 x 65.4 cm). Hier können Sie Mary Cassatt The Cup of Tea als Leinwandbild, auf Acrylglas oder als Kunstdruck-Poster im Online Shop kaufen - lassen Sie sich von fantastischen Bildern verzaubern! Cassatt’s painting The Tea is set in a contemporary drawing room, sometimes described as Cassatt’s own. 1880–81 Metropolitan Museum of Art. With her passion for couture hats and dresses, Cassatt’s sister made an ideal sitter. Mary Cassatt The Cup of Tea Inhalt: In The Cup of Tea Lydia sits in a pink dress and hat, daintily holding a tea cup with a gloved hand. Mary Cassatt was born in Allegheny City, Pennsylvania, in 1845. Die Malerin Mary Cassatt war Tochter von Katherine Kelson Johnston und Robert S. Cassatt einer aus dem Geldadel Pennsylvanias stammenden Bankiersfamilie.Schon in sehr jungen Jahren, während eines vierjährigen Aufenthalts der Familie in Europa, lernte sie die Kunstschätze europäischer Galerien kennen.Gegen den Wunsch ihres Vaters entschloss sie sich, Malerin zu werden. Sip tea and savor creamy scones while a Mary Cassatt expert discusses the only American artist to be officially incorporated into the Impressionist movement. Mary Cassatt - The Cup of Tea 1880-1881. Taking afternoon tea was a social ritual for many upper-middle-class women. Committed to portraying the ordinary events of everyday life, the artist made that ritual the subject of a series of works painted around 1880, when she had been living abroad for the better part of a decade. Cassatt was an American artist who lived abroad in Europe for more than a decade. The Cup Of Tea by Mary Cassatt is a 100% hand-painted oil painting reproduction on canvas painted by one of our professional artists. We want to provide 99% of our content for free (and currently, *all* of it is free), and not to blast you with advertising. Mary Cassatt is widely acclaimed for her intimate scenes of mothers and children, such as Mother About to Wash Her Sleepy Child (1880), that are painted with quick brushstrokes in a pastel palette. Art prints are created using a digital or offset lithography press. Among these works are two related oils, The Cup of Tea (about 1880–81) and Lady at the Tea Table (1883–85), both in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, and a number of prints, among them the MFA’s Tea [M25007] and Afternoon Tea Party [41.811]. Cassatt primarily painted with oil on canvas and our design team recommends this medium for the most accurate reproduction. The Cup of Tea I by Mary Cassatt. Cassat used her sister, Lydia as the model. Committed to portraying the ordinary events of everyday life, the artist made that ritual the subject of a series of works painted around 1880, when she had been living abroad for the better part of a decade. The Cup of Tea Mary Cassatt ca. The artist made the tea ritual the subject of a series of works painted around 1880-81. Cassatt was an American artist who spent time in Europe and whose work depicted 19th-century domestic scenes, in this case afternoon tea, in an impressionist manner. Cassatt showed the painting to critical acclaim in the 1881 … Taking afternoon tea was a social ritual for many upper-middle-class women. The Cup of Tea is an oil painting on canvas by Mary Cassatt.It was painted about 1880. White House paintings, The Cup of Tea by Mary Cassatt, portraits of Dwight D. Eisenhower, Mamie Doud Eisenhower, Grace Coolidge, and Abraham Lincoln Mary Cassatt's family lived in France from 1851 to 1853 and in Germany from 1853 to 1855. Cassatt received critical acclaim for The Cup of Tea in the 1881 Impressionist exhibition. Buy prints of La Tasse de thé by Mary Cassatt online. Mary Cassatt, one of the French Impressionists, presented this painting in the 1881 Impressionist exhibition. Mary Cassatt May 22, 1844 - June 14, 1926; The Cup of Tea - Mary Stevenson Cassatt was an American painter and printmaker. When Mary Cassatt's oldest brother, Robbie, died, the family returned to Philadelphia. Taking afternoon tea was a social ritual for many upper-middle-class women.