Mary Cassatt & Women at the Chicago World's Fair
The large-scale public works decorating the Woman’s Building, a large exposition hall, were among the most unusual artistic features at the Chicago World’s Fair in 1893. Customarily, large-scale murals and sculptures were the domain of men, so it was newsworthy when the female managers of the Woman’s Building commissioned Mary Cassatt and Mary MacMonnies to create monumental paintings for the building’s grand hall, Alice Rideout to craft large-scaled sculptures for the exterior of the building, and other women to make wall murals and stained glass windows. Wanda Corn, a historian at Stanford University, discusses how these and other artists used their unique opportunity to imagine a visual history of women, revising the male view of history seen elsewhere at the fair.
This program is generously underwritten by the Terra Foundation for American Art.
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