Marianna M. Duford, an Artist with Wanderlust

Marianna M. Duford, an Artist with Wanderlust Artist, searcher, student of life, Mother, Oma and happy wife.

03/18/2026

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03/03/2026

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An amazing story…an amazing woman.  Male dominance in art is still a thing!
10/21/2025

An amazing story…an amazing woman. Male dominance in art is still a thing!

Mary Cassatt once stormed out of a Paris gallery, furious — not because her work was rejected, but because it was dismissed as “too feminine to matter.”
It was the 1870s, and Paris was the center of the art world — a place ruled entirely by men. Women weren’t allowed to attend life-drawing classes with n**e models, weren’t taken seriously by galleries, and were told to stick to “domestic subjects.” Cassatt, a banker’s daughter from Pennsylvania, didn’t listen. She crossed an ocean, burned through her savings, and vowed to prove them wrong.
At the Paris Salon, critics sneered at her quiet portraits of mothers and children. “Women painting women,” one wrote, “is like birds painting the sky.” Cassatt didn’t respond with words — she responded with rebellion. When she met Edgar Degas, the notoriously arrogant Impressionist, he saw something few others did: rage wrapped in restraint. “There is someone in you,” he told her, “who sees.”
He invited her to join the Impressionist circle — the only American and one of the few women to ever do so. Suddenly, she was painting alongside Monet, Renoir, and Degas — men who captured the world outside. Cassatt captured the world inside — and in doing so, changed what art could say about women.
Her paintings weren’t sentimental. They were psychological, radical. She painted mothers not as saints, but as thinkers — complex, exhausted, human. Her brush turned tenderness into resistance. “I paint women who matter,” she said. “Because no one else will.”
The male critics called her subjects “trivial.” Cassatt knew better. In an era when women couldn’t vote or control their own finances, she painted them reading, teaching, and thinking — acts of quiet revolution. Every canvas was a manifesto disguised as intimacy.
But her defiance didn’t end with her art. When the French government refused to hang works by women in major exhibitions, Cassatt publicly withdrew her own paintings in protest — a scandal that nearly ended her career. “I would rather fail with integrity,” she said, “than succeed with obedience.”
Even her friendship with Degas was complicated — intellectually electric, emotionally brutal. He admired her talent, but never saw her as an equal. “He told me women can’t paint,” she once said. “So I painted until he stopped saying it.”
The hidden story of Mary Cassatt isn’t just about art — it’s about control.
She never married. Never had children. Never softened her edges to fit the mold expected of a “lady painter.” While other artists chased fame, she chased freedom — financial, emotional, creative. “I have touched some people,” she said later. “That is enough immortality for me.”
By the time she was old and nearly blind, her influence had already reshaped modern art. The women she painted — once dismissed as background figures — became central, thinking beings. Every brushstroke declared: the domestic is political.
Today, museums describe her as “the painter of mothers and children.”
But look closer, and you’ll see something else — a woman who used gentleness as rebellion, color as conviction, and beauty as an argument for equality.
She once said, “I have fought to make my own way — it was not easy, but I would have it no other way.”
Mary Cassatt didn’t just paint women at rest.
She painted the quiet revolution of being seen.

A Happy Frog Hopping out the door to brighten someone special’s holiday!  Thank You!
10/12/2025

A Happy Frog Hopping out the door to brighten someone special’s holiday! Thank You!

Two more, a Bee and Flowers, heading out the door this fine fall day!  We’re here in Golden till 4 and then we’re gone.
10/12/2025

Two more, a Bee and Flowers, heading out the door this fine fall day! We’re here in Golden till 4 and then we’re gone.

A happy collector from NY!  She now owns 6 of my paintings.  ❤️🙏❤️ Happy Trails my friend and thank you!  We’ll be here ...
10/11/2025

A happy collector from NY! She now owns 6 of my paintings. ❤️🙏❤️ Happy Trails my friend and thank you! We’ll be here again tomorrow 10-4. There are still LOADS of precious paintings and jewelry gifties that need homes.❤️❤️❤️

Another happy art customer!  Thank you🙏❤️
10/11/2025

Another happy art customer! Thank you🙏❤️

A HAPPY first sale.  She ran off with a Frog and  Bee… but there’s more!
10/11/2025

A HAPPY first sale. She ran off with a Frog and Bee… but there’s more!

Open today 10-4 and tomorrow!  16 artists for “Art For a Cause”17707 W 16th Ave  Golden, CO
10/11/2025

Open today 10-4 and tomorrow! 16 artists for “Art For a Cause”
17707 W 16th Ave Golden, CO

Come see some great art…Maybe take some home… help support these two amazing non profits with “Art For A Cause”.PS… I ca...
10/05/2025

Come see some great art…Maybe take some home… help support these two amazing non profits with “Art For A Cause”.
PS… I can’t wait to share the miniature paintings I’ve been having so much fun with.
SEE YOU THERE! FREE HUGS!!!❤️

Same pic… not cropped😬
09/30/2025

Same pic… not cropped😬

Saturday, October 11 & Sunday, October 12.    10am to 4pm        15 well known artists come together to help support    ...
09/30/2025

Saturday, October 11 & Sunday, October 12. 10am to 4pm
15 well known artists come together to help support
“ART FOR A CAUSE”
Come by and say hello… spread the word.
I/We would love to see you!
Special surprise… I’m hand painting miniatures for necklaces!
WEARABLE ART… come see what other surprises will be there!

Address

17707 W 16th Ave
Golden, CO
80401-2567

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