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The trouble with women artists ; reframing the history of art

Laure Adler, Camille Viéville (Auteur)
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Résumé

Sixty-seven female artists and their work from the sixteenth century to the present demonstrate the evolution of art through a female-empowered lens. The history of art has been forever considered, written, published, and taught by men, primarily for a male audience. For women, the mere possibility of becoming an artist--to have access to the necessary materials, to produce, exhibit, and, against all odds, succeed and sustain the activity--has been an incessant, dangerous, and exhausting fight--physically, mentally, and psychologically. The time has come to reframe the ... Lire la suite
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Biographie

Camille Viéville, docteur en histoire de l'art contemporain, est l'auteur d'une monographie sur Balthus et le portrait (Paris, Flammarion, 2011, préface de Jean Clair). Elle est spécialiste de l'histoire du portrait (« Vision d'égotisme. L'autoportrait chez Balthus », Balthus 100e anniversaire, martigny, Fondation Gianadda, 2008 ; « Genres détournés. Le portrait nu dans la peinture féministe des années 1960-1970 », Corridor, n° 3, 2009 ; « Géographiede la douleur. Figuration et défigurations sous Weimar », Roven, nov. 2012 ; « Balthus et les poètes : sur un portrait oublié de Jean de Bosschère », Confluências, n° 21, déc. 2012 ;« Pulsions. Réflexions sur le portrait de commande chez Balthus », Balthus, Rome, Villa médicis, scuderie del Quirinale, 2015).
Historienne, journaliste, ancien conseiller culturel de François Mitterrand, Laure Adler
a animé « Le Cercle de minuit » sur France 2. Elle est aussi l'auteur de documents,
dont La Vie quotidienne dans les maisons closes (Hachette, 1990), Les Femmes
politiques (Seuil, 1993) et dernièrement, Les femmes qui aiment sont dangereuses,
chez Flammarion.

Caractéristiques

Caractéristiques
Date Parution04/09/2019
CollectionLivres D'art
EAN9782080203700
Nb. de Pages160
Caractéristiques
EditeurFlammarion
Poids1006 g
PrésentationGrand format
Dimensions28,3 cm x 21,5 cm x 2,0 cm
Détail

Sixty-seven female artists and their work from the sixteenth century to the present demonstrate the evolution of art through a female-empowered lens. The history of art has been forever considered, written, published, and taught by men, primarily for a male audience. For women, the mere possibility of becoming an artist--to have access to the necessary materials, to produce, exhibit, and, against all odds, succeed and sustain the activity--has been an incessant, dangerous, and exhausting fight--physically, mentally, and psychologically. The time has come to reframe the history of art in the context of the brave women who had the courage to defy all rules in order to pursue their vocation and carve out their place in the art world. This book draws the portraits of sixty-seven fascinating women and their significant artistic achievements, from groundbreaking Renaissance painter Artemisia Gentileschi to the photography of Nan Goldin today. Tracing the painters, sculptors, photographers, and performance artists who shaped modern art, readers discover key figures and their signature works, including Mary Cassatt, Sonia Delaunay, Georgia O'Keeffe, Tamara de Lempicka, Frida Kahlo, Dorothea Tanning, Leonora Carrington, Yoko Ono, Eva Hesse, Marina Abramovic, Carrie Mae Weems, and Cindy Sherman. Exploring the codes and archetypes of art history, this celebration of women in art analyzes their slow but steady achievement of artistic independence and the hard-won recognition for their creative work in a domain historically reserved for men.
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