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Box 36

 Container

Contains 15 Results:

Printed materials. Catalogue, 1984-1985

 File — Box: 36, Folder: 11
Scope and Content Note From the Sub-Series: Mary Cassatt, Philadelphia-born artist, was the only American ever invited to exhibit with the French Impressionists. Eventually, she settled in Paris, but Philadelphia remains the largest repository of her work, and she played a pivotal role in encouraging Philadelphia-area collectors to acquire Impressionist paintings despite the critical attitudes taken by her contemporaries. Suzanne G. Lindsay, a guest curator and specialist in 19th-century art, organized the exhibition selected 52...
Dates: 1984-1985

Public relations, 1985

 File — Box: 36, Folder: 12
Scope and Content Note From the Sub-Series: Mary Cassatt, Philadelphia-born artist, was the only American ever invited to exhibit with the French Impressionists. Eventually, she settled in Paris, but Philadelphia remains the largest repository of her work, and she played a pivotal role in encouraging Philadelphia-area collectors to acquire Impressionist paintings despite the critical attitudes taken by her contemporaries. Suzanne G. Lindsay, a guest curator and specialist in 19th-century art, organized the exhibition selected 52...
Dates: 1985

Public relations. Press clippings, 1984-1985

 File — Box: 36, Folder: 13
Scope and Content Note From the Sub-Series: Mary Cassatt, Philadelphia-born artist, was the only American ever invited to exhibit with the French Impressionists. Eventually, she settled in Paris, but Philadelphia remains the largest repository of her work, and she played a pivotal role in encouraging Philadelphia-area collectors to acquire Impressionist paintings despite the critical attitudes taken by her contemporaries. Suzanne G. Lindsay, a guest curator and specialist in 19th-century art, organized the exhibition selected 52...
Dates: 1984-1985

Work meetings, 1984-1985

 File — Box: 36, Folder: 14
Scope and Content Note From the Sub-Series: Mary Cassatt, Philadelphia-born artist, was the only American ever invited to exhibit with the French Impressionists. Eventually, she settled in Paris, but Philadelphia remains the largest repository of her work, and she played a pivotal role in encouraging Philadelphia-area collectors to acquire Impressionist paintings despite the critical attitudes taken by her contemporaries. Suzanne G. Lindsay, a guest curator and specialist in 19th-century art, organized the exhibition selected 52...
Dates: 1984-1985

General, 1979-1985

 File — Box: 36, Folder: 15
Scope and Content Note From the Sub-Series: A comprehensive exhibition of prints by Edgar Degas was organized at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston in celebration of the 150th anniversary of the artist's birth. Ellen S. Jacobowitz installed the exhibition in Philadelphia, and the show later traveled to the Hayward Gallery in London. This display of 225 images, comprising all Degas' known etchings and lithographs, was made possible by grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and supported in Philadelphia by The Pew Memorial...
Dates: 1979-1985