Steadying the Future: What Mary Cassatt Knew About How Modern Women Are Made
We discuss empowerment extensively in our time. We put it on conference panels. We print it on tote bags. We frame it as rupture, as declaration, as a door kicked open. But stand in front of The Banjo Lesson long enough, and you begin to suspect that real empowerment does not begin with a speech. It begins with proximity. Look carefully at the bodies. The woman sits forward, the banjo angled across her lap, shoulders set in quiet concentration. She is not turned toward the girl. She is not theatrically guiding smaller fingers into place. She is playing, or about to play, demonstrating something she already knows. The young girl does not face her as a pupil across a table. She leans from behind, almost folded into the woman’s back, peering over her shoulder at the fingerboard. Her chin hovers near that shoulder. Her eyes track the exact placement of fingers. She is not yet performing. She is studying. That spatial decision is the thesis. Mary Cassatt painted this pa...