So many beautiful works of art discussed here. May cause your gallery-visiting wishlist to increase (it did mine).
So many beautiful works of art discussed here. May cause your gallery-visiting wishlist to increase (it did mine).
Alice Neel's painting of Faith Ringgold.
Neel is the final artist featured in Higgie's book.
"It is so rare in the history of art to hear a woman explain why she did what she did when everything was stacked against her. Alice put it bluntly: 'You inherit the world. Somehow, you find a place for yourself.'"
Mabel Josephine Mackerras by Nora Heysen
"In 1943 Nora became the first Australian woman to be appointed an official war artist. She travelled to New Guinea and painted and drew nurses and, in particular, women working; 245 of these works ... are now in the collection of the national War Memorial in Canberra."
Throughout her life as an artist, Helene had painted still lifestyle, portraits and landscapes; she was interested in fashion, in faces and masks; in what we choose to reveal and to hide of ourselves; in the possibilities of paint.
...if women aren't in books, they may as well never have existed.
From review by Julie M Johnson
https://www.the-tls.co.uk/articles/the-mirror-and-the-palette-jennifer-higgie-bo...
2 of 2 posts re the ads featured in TLS' two articles on recent books exploring women artists. This book I have on the shelf to read and it looks really good.
Seems like no one told Yale's art history publishers though.
If you 'follow the money', not a great sign.
(And even more pointed: the authors...)