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Lavinia Fontana: Trailblazer, Rule Breaker explores this female
Renaissance artist’s fascinating biography and the cultural
climate that enabled her to become the first woman artist in
Western Europe to gain commercial success beyond the confines of a
court or a convent. Bringing together several strands of
scholarship on Fontana and her contemporaries, it provides context
to her career and examines areas underrepresented in current
scholarship on the painter, including information on her workshop
practice. Focusing on the portraiture for which she was
renowned, Lavinia Fontana tells stories that will be universally
familiar—tales of family bonds, sibling rivalries, engagements,
weddings, births, and deaths. Written by Aoife Brady, with
contributions from one of the leading scholars on Fontana, Babette
Bohn, and a foremost expert on Renaissance fashion, Jonquil
O’Reilly, this engaging book explores Fontana’s world and how
she forged a successful career in the male-dominated world of
Renaissance Italy. Â Â Exhibition Schedule: National
Gallery of Ireland, Dublin (May 6–August 27, 2023)
A brand new look at the extraordinary accomplishments of early
modern Italian women artists This generously illustrated volume
surveys a sweeping range of early modern Italian women artists,
exploring their practice and paths to success within the
male-dominated art world of the period. New attention to archival
documents and detailed technical analyses of the beautiful
paintings featured here-ranging from historical subjects to
portraits and still lifes-offer new insight into the ways these
women worked and their accomplishments. Essays and catalogue
entries by an international team of distinguished art historians
examine the works of Artemisia Gentileschi, Sofonisba Anguissola,
Lavinia Fontana, Fede Galizia, Elisabetta Sirani, Giovanna Garzoni,
Rosalba Carriera, and other less known Italian women artists.
Through these works of art in diverse media-from paintings to
prints-the fascinating stories of early modern Italian women
artists are revealed. Distributed for the Detroit Institute of Arts
Exhibition Schedule: Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford, CT (September
30, 2021-January 9, 2022) Detroit Institute of Arts (February 6-May
29, 2022)
These ground-breaking essays, all based on original archival
research, consider the evolving interest in Bolognese art in
seventeenth-century Italy, particularly focusing on the period
after the death of Guido Reni in 1642. Edited by Bolognese
specialists Raffaella Morselli and Babette Bohn, the studies
collected here focus on the taste for Bolognese art within Bologna
itself and in other parts of the Italian peninsula, including
Mantua, Ferrara, Rome, and Florence. Essays examine the roles of
gender, class, and the social status of the artist in early modern
Bologna; approaches to exhibiting artworks in noble Bolognese
collections; the reputations of local women artists; the popularity
of Bolognese quadratura painting; and the relative success of both
contemporary and earlier Bolognese artists with Italian collectors.
Winner of the 2022 Prose Award (Art History & Criticism) from
the Association of American Publishers This groundbreaking book
seeks to explain why women artists were far more numerous, diverse,
and successful in early modern Bologna than elsewhere in Italy.
They worked as painters, sculptors, printmakers, and embroiderers;
many obtained public commissions and expanded beyond the portrait
subjects to which women were traditionally confined. Babette Bohn
asks why that was the case in this particular place and at this
particular time. Drawing on extensive archival research, Bohn
investigates an astonishing sixty-eight women artists, including
Elisabetta Sirani and Lavinia Fontana. The book identifies and
explores the factors that facilitated their success, including
local biographers who celebrated women artists in new ways, an
unusually diverse system of artistic patronage that included
citizens from all classes, the impact of Bologna’s venerable
university, an abundance of women writers, and the frequency of
self-portraits and signed paintings by many women artists. In
tracing the evolution of Bologna’s female artists from
nun-painters to working professionals, Bohn proposes new
attributions and interpretations of their works, some of which are
reproduced here for the first time. Featuring original
methodological models, innovative and historically grounded
insights, and new documentation, this book will be a crucial
resource for art historians, historians, and women’s studies
scholars and students.
This volume is the third in an influential series of anthologies by
editors Norma Broude and Mary D. Garrard that challenge art history
from a feminist perspective. Following their "Feminism and Art
History: Questioning the Litany" (1982) and "The Expanding
Discourse: Feminism and Art History" (1992), this new volume
identifies female agency as a central theme of recent feminist
scholarship. Framed by a lucid and stimulating critical
introduction, twenty-three essays on artists and issues from the
Renaissance to the present, written in the 1990s and after, offer a
nuanced critique of the poststructuralist premises of 1980s
feminist art history.The contributors include: Allison Arieff,
Janis Bergman-Carton, Babette Bohn, Norma Broude, Anna C. Chave,
Julie Cole, Bridget Elliott, Mary D. Garrard, Sheila ffolliott,
Darcy Grimaldo Grigsby, Ruth E. Iskin, Geraldline A. Johnson,
Amelia Jones, Maud Lavin, Julie Nicoletta, Carol Ockman, Erica
Rand, John B. Ravenal, Lisa Saltzman, and Mary D. Sheriff.
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