Women Artists in Paris, 1850-1900 - Laurence Madeline

Staff Pick

Women Artists in Paris: 1850-1900 (Yale, $65) edited by Laurence Madeline, former curator at the Musée d’Orsay, is a must-own for art lovers, historians, and feminists alike. This stunning exhibition catalogue presents over eighty paintings by thirty-seven different artists. Paris in the late nineteenth century was considered the place for artists to train, and people came from around the world to develop their technique. This catalogue is a testament to the exceptional and varied work produced by the women who journeyed to Paris to pursue their artistic ambitions. These artists fought to achieve recognition at a time when artistic talent and creative genius were thought to be reserved for men, all the while also trying to adhere to the social norms that governed the lives of respectable women. They persevered in the face of rejection and condescension, and created masterful works of art in the process. The scholarly essays that open the book are fascinating and well worth the read, but the catalog of full-page color reproductions that follow are what readers will find irresistible. Here you will encounter works by household names like Mary Cassatt alongside those by artists still waiting to achieve the widespread public recognition they are due, such as Marie Bashkirtseff and Cecilia Beaux.

Women Artists in Paris, 1850-1900 By Laurence Madeline, Bridget Alsdorf (Contributions by), Jane R. Becker (Contributions by), Joëlle Bolloch (Contributions by), Vibeke Waallann Hansen (Contributions by), Richard Kendall (Contributions by) Cover Image
By Laurence Madeline, Bridget Alsdorf (Contributions by), Jane R. Becker (Contributions by), Joëlle Bolloch (Contributions by), Vibeke Waallann Hansen (Contributions by), Richard Kendall (Contributions by)
$70.00
ISBN: 9780300223934
Availability: Special Order—Subject to Availability
Published: Yale University Press - October 31st, 2017