Date post: | 15-Apr-2017 |
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AUTHORITY CASCADESA PRESENTATION STRATEGYFOR INFORMATION OVERLOAD
David Newbury, Carnegie Museum of Art
David Newbury — @workergnome
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n78096937.html
David Newbury — @workergnome
ULAN
http://vocab.getty.edu/ulan/500012368?inference=all
David Newbury — @workergnome
BRITISH MUSEUM
http://collection.britishmuseum.org/resource?uri=http://
collection.britishmuseum.org/id/person-institution/22182
David Newbury — @workergnome
SMITHSONIAN MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART
http://edan.si.edu/saam/id/person-institution/770
David Newbury — @workergnome
WIKIDATA
https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q173223
David Newbury — @workergnome
OCCUPATION/ROLE
> Wikidata: painter, printmaker, graphic artist> Getty: artists (visual artists), painters (artists),
printmakers, portraitists, genre artists> BM: painter/draughtsman, printmaker
David Newbury — @workergnome
BRITISH MUSEUMPainter, printmaker and pastellist of portraits and intimate genre scenes. Studied Philadelphia; to Italy 1868, settled in Paris 1874, never returning to USA. Friend and colleague of Edgar Degas and Edouard Manet (qq.v.) who both influenced
her style; worked mostly in Paris; acted as an important adviser to wealthy American collectors of Impressionist
pictures, such as the Havemeyers and John Howard Whittemore (q.v.). She was awarded the Légion d'honneur in
1904David Newbury — @workergnome
SMITHSONIAN MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ARTBorn to a prominent Pennsylvania family, Mary Cassatt spent her artistic career in
Europe. Though unmarried, she was no stranger to the family life she so often depicted: her parents and sister moved to Paris in 1877 and her two brothers and
their families visited frequently. Today considered an Impressionist, Cassatt exhibited with such artists as Monet, Pissarro, and her close friend Degas, and
shared with them an independent spirit, refusing throughout her life to be associated with any art academy or to accept any prizes. She stands alone,
however, in her depictions of the activities of women in their worlds: caring for children, reading, crocheting, pouring tea, and enjoying the company of other women.
Elizabeth Chew Women Artists (brochure, Washington, DC: National Museum of American Art, Smithsonian Institution)
David Newbury — @workergnome