Mary Stevenson Cassatt’s 1884 double portrait of Alexander J. Cassatt and his son captures an intimate father-son bond, reflecting American artistic success within Paris’s vibrant cultural world.
Camille Pissarro Flower Arrangements
Camille Pissarro, a central figure in Impressionism and Neo-Impressionism, pioneered modern landscape painting through his lifelong commitment to capturing rural life, light, and everyday scenes across all eight Impressionist exhibitions.
Little Dancer Aged Fourteen by Edgar Degas
Degas’ Little Dancer Aged Fourteen combines wax, fabric, and real hair over a complex armature, creating a strikingly lifelike sculpture that blurred the boundaries between art, realism, and theatrical illusion.
The Princess from the Land of Porcelain by James Abbott McNeill Whistler
Whistler’s Princess from the Land of Porcelain reimagines Western portraiture through Japanese and Chinese aesthetics, portraying Christina Spartali in exotic costume amid porcelain-inspired decor, blending beauty, fantasy, and cross-cultural artistic influence.
Five O’Clock Tea with Mary Stevenson Cassatt
Mary Cassatt’s Five O’Clock Tea (1880) depicts an intimate Parisian domestic ritual, capturing refined bourgeois women at leisure in a modern interior, with subtle Impressionist attention to everyday life and atmosphere.
Pissarro’s Basket of Pears
Camille Pissarro’s Basket of Pears (1872, Pontoise) is a luminous Impressionist still life, evoking rural simplicity and the quiet abundance of fruit through subtle light, color, and balanced composition.
The Turkeys by Claude Monet
Claude Monet’s The Turkeys (1876) captures a radiant rural scene in which vibrant light, loose brushwork, and asymmetrical composition reflect the Impressionist search for immediacy and atmospheric vitality in everyday nature.
Rouen Cathedral in the Morning
Claude Monet’s Rouen Cathedral series explores the fleeting effects of light and atmosphere on Gothic architecture, revealing how a single façade transforms endlessly across time, weather, and perception.
Mother’s Day
Motherhood in art, from Mary Cassatt to Kitagawa Utamaro, reveals intimate, universal bonds of tenderness, care, and love across cultures and centuries.
Émile Zola by Édouard Manet
Émile Zola defends Édouard Manet against Salon critics, praising his modern vision and securing a lasting friendship, later immortalized in Manet’s portrait of Zola surrounded by symbols of art, literature, and innovation.




