Elegantly Dressed Wednesday: Fashionable Feminist Forerunners
Posted by Kathleen Benton on Sep 30, 2009
I am fortunate that I live in the age of the Internet. The Internet allows easy access to information that before was very limited. With the availability of the Internet I learn something new every day. Writing about art as I do here requires a good deal of research. By using the Internet that research often brings me a wealth of new knowledge I wasn’t even looking for. Questions that I might have formerly left unanswered – because I didn’t have the right book or couldn’t make it to the library – can now be obtained instantly. Sometimes these answers lead to further questions such as, “Why wasn’t this information a part of my education?”
It was through this ability to learn about things I wasn’t even looking for that my subject matter for this post, female artists from the Renaissance and Baroque Periods, was inspired. I’m sure the art and history of of these artists have been documented for many years. So it was quite a revelation when recently I came upon some web sites devoted to women artists that I had never known. The artists included at these web sites were not mentioned in any of the art history classes I attended. I’ll admit that until two weeks ago I had never been aware of any of the artists that I am featuring in this post.
Suddenly I feel a bit cheated by my educators. I have to wonder why none of these artists were mentioned in my classes. Although I do not consider myself a scholar I’ve had a bit more that the average education in art history. Many of the Medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque period classes that I attended were on the graduate level. So I think I could reasonably expect that such in-depth studies might include the fact that women were making names for themselves right alongside men. I now realize that my entire education was edited by historians and professors who were themselves not aware of or chose to ignore the participation and achievements of so many female artists.
What I’ve discovered is that the documented contributions of women artists date back for centuries. But I knew nothing of the work, education, and success that these women artist attained. I thought Mary Cassatt and Berthe Morisot were our early heroines, because those two ladies were the first female artists I recall being mentioned in my classes. It seems I’ve missed out on about eight hundred years worth of artistic achievements made by women.
Unfortunately I cannot highlight every one of those woman in a single post. And of those I do feature here, I do not feel qualified to discuss their work and activity in great detail since I’ve still so much to learn. At least, if I didn’t know of these women before, because of the Internet I do now and can explore their work further. So with this introduction let us reflect on the difficulties they must have endured and the frustrations they must have felt.
Their lives could not have been easy. (How did these ladies paint in those clothes? Judith Leyster’s collar would make a convenient palette.) Here were women who most likely had their roles assigned to them by society, yet they were able to develop their creativity and reputations as well. They were educated, attended universities, and were employed in activites and positions usually reserved for men. And it seems they did it all while remaining fashionably in vogue and in the vanguard so that we might now have the many choices we can take for granted today.
Kathleen Benton
(Click on images to enlarge and read details. Click again to return to page.)
Sonfonisba Anguissola (Italian, 1532-1625), Self-portrait at the Easel, 1556, Oil on canvas, Muzeum-Zamek, Lańcut, Poland
Artemisia Gentileschi (Italian, 1593-1652), Self-portrait as the Allegory of Painting, 1638-39, Oil on canvas, 38 x 29 inches), The Royal Collection © 2008, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II
Clara Peeters (Flemish, 1594?-c1657), Self-Portrait with Still Life, Oil on panel, 14 x 19 inches, London, Hallsborough Gallery
Judith Leyster (Dutch, 1609-1660), Self-Portrait, c. 1632-1633, Oil on canvas, 29 3/8 x 25 5/8 in.), National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, USA
Portrait of Maria Sibylla Merian. (I can find no information on this painting. Please contact me if you can help.)
Maria Sibyllan Merian (German,1647-1717), Branch of guava tree with leafcutter ants, army ants, pink-toed tarantulas, huntsman spiders, and ruby topaz hummingbird, c.1701-05, Watercolour on vellum, 39 x 32.3 cm, The Royal Collection © 2009, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. The 95 watercolours contained in Metamorphosis in the Royal Collection were bought in 1755 by George III, when Prince of Wales.
Adélaïde Labille Guiard (French, 1749–1803), Self Portrait with Two Pupils, Mademoiselle Marie Gabrielle Capet and Mademoiselle Carreaux de Rosemond, 1785, Oil on canvas, 83 x 59 1/2 inches, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Élizabeth-Louise Vigée-Lebrun (French, 1755-1842), Self -portrait, 1790, Oil on canvas, 39.37 x 31.89 inches, Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Italy
If you would like to find more information on women artists, here’s a list at wendy.com to get you started.
© 2009 All rights reserved Kathleen Benton | You Can Hire an Artist
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“Why wasn’t this information a part of my education?”
The beginning of your answer is
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depiction_of_women_artists_in_art_history
and the end is out there
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_for_art%27s_sake
somewhere…
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blind_men_and_an_elephant