Google is celebrating the birth of Mary Cassatt today with a Cassatt-inspired logo (left) on its main search page. Cassatt was born on May 22, 1844 in Allegheny City, Pennsylvania. She died near Paris on June 14, 1926. The Google Doodle is based on Cassatt’s painting, The Child’s Bath (below), now in the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago.
So what can a Google Doodle do? Go to google.com today and click on the logo. You go immediately to search results for mary cassatt. Select Google Images, and the first page of results includes a Cassatt image linked to Lewdness in the Loges on this site. That path drove more than 5,000 page views to blindflaneur overnight, taking the site’s total views over 150,000. The ripple effect carried another 100 readers to Shape-Shifters in the Fair Use Lab, a first for that nascent site. So, Mary, I’d buy you a beer on your birthday if you could drop by Café Mouffe!

Mary Cassatt. The Child’s Bath. 1893. Art Institute of Chicago.
![gustave_caillebotte_paris_street_rainy_day Gustave Caillebotte. Paris Street, Rainy Day (La Place de l’Europe, temps de pluie). 1877. Oil on canvas. Art Institute of Chicago. [Source: Wikimedia Commons]](http://blindflaneur.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/02/gustave_caillebotte_paris_street_rainy_day_1877_wiki.jpg)
"Brendan, this is what the world looks like all the time to me. Just a little fog. It’s a fine day for boating on the Great Lakes.” Without missing a stroke he turned to dart a skeptical glance at me. Brendan the Navigator. When we named him I didn’t tell his mother everything the legendary Irish name implied. But I imagined him taking on the role of navigator for me. Growing up with Coastal Survey charts and tales of Great Lakes shipwrecks, he came to know Superior as another home. He never doubted the wisdom of canoeing there with a father who was half blind. ![ada_signing_072690_ucp_2 President George H.W. Bush signs into law the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) on July 26, 1990 as Justin Dart looks on. [Source: ucp.org]](http://fairuselab.net/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/ada_signing_072690_ucp_2.jpg)
![shepard_fairey_hope_2008 Shepard Fairey’s “Barack Obama/Hope” image went viral during the 2008 election. Then controversy about the image’s source transformed it into the poster child for fair use in the public debate over copyright and free culture. Now FULAB takes “Hope” as its icon [Image source: Wikipedia]](http://fairuselab.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/shepard_fairey_hope_2008.jpg)

If there is an emerging genetic underclass, I could run for class president or class clown. Read more in
The legendary Kiki of Montparnasse posed for Man Ray’s 
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