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Published byThomasine Randall Modified over 8 years ago
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Women & Art
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Hatshepsut Commissioned Mortuary Temple First recorded great female ruler Portrayed herself As man pharaoh c. 1450 BCE
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Theodora Wife and and empress of Justinian Portrayed leading a procession and equal to her husband (San Vitale, Ravenna) Byzantine c. 550 CE
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Hildegarde of Bingen (artist) Illustrator of Illuminated manuscripts, composer of music, visionary, theologian, German nun, died 1179 Fig. 17-35 Vision of Hildegarde of Bingen, c.1100 CE
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Isabella D’Este (patron) MOST important female patron of the Renaissance – supported painters like Titian, Raphael, DaVinci Fig 22-39 Portrait by Titian 1534-1536
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Sofonisba Anguissola (artist) Fig. 22-46 Considered to be first Italian woman “art celebrity” Studied under Michelangelo Court painter to Phillip II of Spain Mannerist painter Portrait of the Artist’s Sisters And Brothers, c.1555
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Caterina Van Hemessen (artist) Fig 23-19 Flemish artist Painted FIRST known N. European self-portrait by a woman
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Artemisia Gentileschi (artist) Baroque painter and follower of Caravaggio Best known for her versions of Judith Slaying Holofernes. Chiaroscuro = drama Fig. 24-21 Judith Slaying Holofernes, 1620
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Marie de’Medici (patron) Commissioned Rubens to paint series of 21 HUGE paintings glorifying her! Wife of Henry IV, first of the Bourbon Kings 24-36 RUBENS, Arrival of Marie de Medici 1622-1625
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Judith Leyster (artist) Dutch Baroque painter Thriving career as Portrait painter -- Also painted still lifes & genre scenes popular in Holland died. 1660 24-39 Leyster, Self-portrait 1630
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Elisabeth Vigee-LeBrun (artist) Famous for her portraits of Marie Antoinette Very successful Financially independent One of few women admitted to Royal Academy Marie Antoinette, 1783 Fig 28-13, Self Portrait, 1970
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Angelica Kauffmann - Artist Neoclassical painter Lived 1741- 1807 Trained in Italy, worked in England Founding member of British Royal Academy of Arts 28-20= A Model of Virtue Fig 28-20 Cornelia Presenting Her Children As Her Treasures, 1785
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Edmonia Lewis (artist) Neoclassical sculptor African-American Went to Oberlin College Traveled to Italy This work made 4 yrs After Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation= Abolitionist statement Fig 28-33 Forever Free, 1867
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Julia Margaret Cameron (artist) Prominent portrait photographer in England, 1860s & 70s Photos are usually slightly blurred for dramatic effect. Often dressed sitters As literary subjects Fig 28-67, Cameron, Ophelia, 1867
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Rosa Bonheur (artist) 1822-1899 Most celebrated female artist of the 19 th century! A Realist well known for paintings of animals Described as a “naturalist” Fig. 29-10 The Horse Fair 1852
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Berthe Morisot 1841-1895 Impressionist painter Exhibited with Impressionists Used swift, sketchy brushstrokes Married to Manet’s brother and sometimes posed for Manet. 29-28 Villa at the Seaside, 1874
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Mary Cassatt (artist) 1844-1926 American Impressionist painter Influenced by Degas and Japanese woodblock prints Japonisme Known for her portraits of mothers with children Fig 29-31 The Bath, 1892
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Gertrude Stein (patron) Famous patron of Picasso, Matisse, and other avant-garde artists living in Paris during the early 1900’s and 1920’s Fig 33-8 Picasso’s portrait of Gertrude Stein, 1907
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Kathe Kollwitz - Artist 1867-1945 German Expressionist Known for very powerful depictions of grief/loss Printmaker (woodcut, etching, lithography) Fig 33-41 Woman with Dead Child, 1903, etching
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Georgia O’Keefe 1887- 1986 Many styles Affiliated with Precisionism in 1920s Known for abstract depictions of flowers, skulls, bones, landscape Fig Intro #4 Jack-in-the-Pulpit, No. 4, 1930
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Meret Oppenheim - Artist 1913-1985 Swiss Surrealist While having tea with Picasso, Oppenheim ordered her tea with a “little more fur” since it had grown cold! Anthropomorphic quality 33-48 Object, 1936
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Frida Kahlo - Artist 1907-1954 Mexican portraitist Labeled as a Surrealist Known for her symbolic self- portraits Married to Diego Riviera (a muralist) Self-portrait, 1940 Fig 33-49 The Two Fridas, 1939
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Barbara Hepworth - Artist 1898-1986 English Minimalist Sculpture attempts to represent the essence of things Loved nature and organic forms 33-70 Oval Sculpture No. 2, 1943 Plaster cast
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Dorothea Lange-Artist 1895-1965 Photographer known for documentation of the Great Depression of U. S. 1930s Mississippi Delta Children, 1939 Fig 33-75 Migrant Mother, 1935
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Helen Frankenthaler –Artist b. 1928 Post-painterly Abstractionist OR Color Field painter Large works where paint is poured onto unprimed canvas Like Color Field but more spontaneous Bay Side, 1967, acrylic on canvas
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Maya Lin- artist/architect b. 1960 Minimalist sculptor Works with land forms & nature Fig 34-16 Vietnam Veterans Memorial, Washington D. C.1983 Black granite
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Louise Nevelson- Artist/sculptor 1899- 1988 American Sculptor Known for her assemblages – artworks created from existing objects- Architectural feel Sky Cathedral, 1958 Fig. 34-17, Tropical Garden II, 1959, wood painted black
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Judy Chicago – artist b. 1939 Aimed to estab respect for women in history Most famous for The Dinner Party that hosts 39 honored guests w 999 names on tiles Ea place setting unique Fig 34-59, The Dinner Party 1979, multimedia, incl ceramics And sewing
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Miriam Shapiro –artist b.1923 Maker of femmages collage by women Sought to bring attention to beauty of materials Used hidden metaphors Fig. 34-60 Anatomy of a Kimono (section) 1976, fabric+acrylic on canvas
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Cindy Sherman -Artist b.1954 Explores how images of women construct Reality Often dresses herself as characters Fig 34-61 Untitled Film Still #35 Photograph, 1979
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Barbara Kruger b. 1945 Explored “male gaze” Worked to undermine Myths about women Used text, graphics Fig. 34-62 Untitled (Your Gaze Hits the Side of My Face), 1981 Photograph w red frame
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Magdalena Abakanowicz b.1930 Polish born fiber artist Installations Performance artist Deals with themes Of alienation Fig 34-73 Backs, 1982 Fibers molded
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Guerrilla Girls Call attention to injustice in art world Sexist, racist themes Public demonstrations Protect identities w Gorilla masks Fig 34-85, 1988, Poster
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