Images of Victorian Womanhood in English Art
Author: Susan P. Casteras
Publisher:
Published: 1987
Total Pages: 208
ISBN-13:
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Author: Susan P. Casteras
Publisher:
Published: 1987
Total Pages: 208
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Jo Devereux
Publisher: McFarland
Published: 2016-08-02
Total Pages: 265
ISBN-13: 1476626049
DOWNLOAD EBOOKWhen women were admitted to the Royal Academy Schools in 1860, female art students gained a foothold in the most conservative art institution in England. The Royal Female College of Art, the South Kensington Schools and the Slade School of Fine Art also produced increasing numbers of women artists. Their entry into a male-dominated art world altered the perspective of other artists and the public. They came from disparate levels of society--Princess Louise, the fourth daughter of Queen Victoria, studied sculpture at the National Art Training School--yet they all shared ambition, talent and courage. Analyzing their education and careers, this book argues that the women who attended the art schools during the 1860s and 1870s--including Kate Greenaway, Elizabeth Butler, Helen Allingham, Evelyn De Morgan and Henrietta Rae--produced work that would accommodate yet subtly challenge the orthodoxies of the fine art establishment. Without their contributions, Victorian art would be not simply the poorer but hardly recognizable to us today.
Author: Lynn Mae Alexander
Publisher: Ohio University Press
Published: 2003
Total Pages: 266
ISBN-13: 0821414933
DOWNLOAD EBOOKIn Victorian England, virtually all women were taught to sew, but this essentially domestic virtue took on a different aspect for the professional seamstress of the day. This study considers the way this powerful image of working-class suffering was used by social reformers in art and literature.
Author: Clarissa Campbell Orr
Publisher:
Published: 1995-06-15
Total Pages: 232
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKExamines the ideology of women's art practice and their position in the art world of Victorian Britain in relation to codes of femininity and feminist movements.
Author: Elree I. Harris
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 2013-11-26
Total Pages: 388
ISBN-13: 1135494347
DOWNLOAD EBOOKFirst Published in 1997. This book is intended as a resource for anyone interested in the artistic contributions and activities of women in nineteenth-century Britain. It is an index as well as an annotated bibliography and provides sources for information about women well known in their own time and about women who were little known then and are forgotten now
Author: Elizabeth Siegel
Publisher:
Published: 2009
Total Pages: 208
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis title examines comprehensively the little-known phenomenon of Victorian photocollage, presenting imagery that has rarely - and in many cases, never - been displayed or reproduced.
Author: Andrew Bradstock
Publisher: Springer
Published: 2016-02-09
Total Pages: 244
ISBN-13: 134926749X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAn interdisciplinary study of Victorian women of faith as portrayed in the fiction and non-fiction of the period. The book explores how novelists, biographers and other writers depicted religious women, with special reference to the influence of the ideal of the 'Angel in the House' as embodied in Coventry Patmore's poem of that name. Among those whose work is explored are George Eliot, Elizabeth Gaskell, Christina Rossetti, George Moore and Anne Bront as well as hymnwriters, missionary biographers, non-conformist obituarists and artists of the Aesthetic Movement.
Author: Susan P. Casteras
Publisher:
Published: 1982
Total Pages: 103
ISBN-13: 9780930606367
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: PH D Antonia Losano
Publisher:
Published: 2021-01-29
Total Pages: 316
ISBN-13: 9780814257364
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe nineteenth century saw a marked rise both in the sheer numbers of women active in visual art professions and in the discursive concern for the woman artist in fiction, the periodical press, art history, and politics. The Woman Painter in Victorian Literature argues that Victorian women writers used the controversial figure of the woman painter to intervene in the discourse of aesthetics. These writers were able to assert their own status as artistic producers through the representation of female visual artists. Women painters posed a threat to the traditional heterosexual erotic art scenarios--a male artist and a male viewer admiring a woman or feminized art object. Antonia Losano traces an actual movement in history in which women writers struggled to rewrite the relations of gender and art to make a space for female artistic production. She examines as well the disruption female artists caused in the socioeconomic sphere. Losano offers close readings of a wide array of Victorian writers, particularly those works classified as noncanonical--by Anne Thackeray Ritchie, Margaret Oliphant, Anne Brontë, and Mrs. Humphrey Ward--and a new look at better-known novels such as Jane Eyre and Daniel Deronda, focusing on the pivotal social and aesthetic meanings of female artistic production in these texts. Each of the novels considered here is viewed as a contained, coherent, and complex aesthetic treatise that coalesces around the figure of the female painter.
Author: Deborah Cherry
Publisher: Psychology Press
Published: 1993
Total Pages: 275
ISBN-13: 9780415060530
DOWNLOAD EBOOKLooks at the experience of women painters within the oppressive confines of the Victorian patriarchy. Using biographies, journals and letters Cherry shows how their working lives were shaped by the social order of difference.