Career Women: A Review

IF 0.1 4区 历史学 0 MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES
PARERGON Pub Date : 2023-12-18 DOI:10.1353/pgn.2023.a914788
Amy Orner
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Jones, Tanja L., ed., <em>Women Artists in the Early Modern Courts of Europe c. 1450–1700</em>, Amsterdam, Amsterdam University Press, 2021; hardback; pp. 218; R.R.P. €110,00; ISBN 9789462988194. <p>How does our current conception of what it means to be a woman artist exclude those who do not fit the traditional definition? Though women artists of the early modern period defy easy characterisation, each of the three books highlighted in this review consider women artists from 1450 to 1800, as well as those that do not fit the typical qualifications for professionalisation. Two books, Babette Bohn’s <em>Women Artists, their Patrons, and their Publics in Early Modern Bologna</em>, and <em>By her Hand: Artemisia Gentileschi and Women Artists in Italy, 1500–1800</em>, edited by Eve Straussman-Pflanzer and Oliver Tostmann, focus their study on Italy. The third, <em>Women Artists in the Early Modern Courts of Europe c. 1450–1700</em>, edited by Tanja L. Jones, extends its realm of concern to cover continental Europe. All three provide overviews of their chosen temporal and geographic region. The women artists discussed in these books are presented as adhering to one of three archetypes: the nun as artist, the court artist, or the professional artist. What did these characterisations mean? Can any woman artist be securely placed in just one? These three books under review address these questions by highlighting aspects of self-fashioning and female artistic personas that rely on societal influences such as class, marital status, and connections to networks of artistic production and patronage.</p> <p>A common thread connecting these three works is their debt to the work of Linda Nochlin. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Career Women: A Review
  • Amy Orner (bio)
Bohn, Babette, Women Artists, their Patrons, and their Publics in Early Modern Bologna, Pennsylvania, The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2021; hardback; pp. 316; R.R.P. US$74.95; 81 colour, 60 b/w illustrations; ISBN 9780271086965. Straussman-Pflanzer, Eve, and Oliver Tostmann, eds, By her Hand: Artemisia Gentileschi and Women Artists in Italy, 1500–1800, Detroit and New Haven, Detroit Institute of Arts and Yale University Press, 2021; hardback; pp. 208; R.R.P. US$40.00; 141 illustrations; ISBN 9780300256369. Jones, Tanja L., ed., Women Artists in the Early Modern Courts of Europe c. 1450–1700, Amsterdam, Amsterdam University Press, 2021; hardback; pp. 218; R.R.P. €110,00; ISBN 9789462988194.

How does our current conception of what it means to be a woman artist exclude those who do not fit the traditional definition? Though women artists of the early modern period defy easy characterisation, each of the three books highlighted in this review consider women artists from 1450 to 1800, as well as those that do not fit the typical qualifications for professionalisation. Two books, Babette Bohn’s Women Artists, their Patrons, and their Publics in Early Modern Bologna, and By her Hand: Artemisia Gentileschi and Women Artists in Italy, 1500–1800, edited by Eve Straussman-Pflanzer and Oliver Tostmann, focus their study on Italy. The third, Women Artists in the Early Modern Courts of Europe c. 1450–1700, edited by Tanja L. Jones, extends its realm of concern to cover continental Europe. All three provide overviews of their chosen temporal and geographic region. The women artists discussed in these books are presented as adhering to one of three archetypes: the nun as artist, the court artist, or the professional artist. What did these characterisations mean? Can any woman artist be securely placed in just one? These three books under review address these questions by highlighting aspects of self-fashioning and female artistic personas that rely on societal influences such as class, marital status, and connections to networks of artistic production and patronage.

A common thread connecting these three works is their debt to the work of Linda Nochlin. Each of these three books express their gratitude for Nochlin and her trailblazing 1971 essay ‘Why Have There Been No Great Women Artists?’, in which she argues for a methodological approach that investigates the social and institutional obstacles of art production and art history that prevented women [End Page 203] from participating in the art world.1 Bohn, Jones, and Straussman-Pflanzer and Tostmann all position themselves as a first within the field. Bohn provides the first comprehensive study of Bologna’s women artists, Jones gathers the first volume of essays dedicated to women as producers of visual and material culture in continental European courts, and Straussman-Pflanzer and Tostmann facilitated the first exhibition dedicated to early modern Italian women artists at two of the oldest civic art museums in the United States, the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art and the Detroit Institute of Art. With each of these publications marking ‘firsts’, they offer much-needed contributions to the study of early modern women.

A pleasure to read, Babette Bohn’s book chronicles the proliferation of professional women artists in Bologna in the early modern period. Bohn’s argument is shaped by the information found in the archives. With sixty-eight artists uncovered by her extensive archival work, she provides the first comprehensive study of Bologna’s women artists. Bohn contextualises Bologna’s reputation as a haven for female artists through a chronological examination of the prominent literary, religious, and artistic women in the city. These women were known as pittrici, though they included painters, sculptors, printmakers, embroiderers, and women who created drawings. She privileges painters over other artists, due in part to the archival evidence and the outsized presence of Elisabetta Sirani against which other Bolognese women artists are judged.

Bohn splits her book into two parts. The first traces the historical context, biographies, and the development of the professional woman artist. The second part is thematic, revealing patterns of patronage and collecting, examining signatures and the self-fashioning of women artists, and analysing the drawings and prints created by...

职业女性回顾
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: 职业女性:A Review Amy Orner (bio) Bohn, Babette, Women Artists, their Patrons, and their Publics in Early Modern Bologna, Pennsylvania, The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2021; hardback; pp.Straussman-Pflanzer、Eve 和 Oliver Tostmann 编辑,《经她之手》:Artemisia Gentileschi and Women Artists in Italy, 1500-1800, Detroit and New Haven, Detroit Institute of Arts and Yale University Press, 2021; hardback; pp.Jones, Tanja L., ed., Women Artists in the Early Modern Courts of Europe c. 1450-1700, Amsterdam, Amsterdam University Press, 2021; hardback; pp.我们目前关于女性艺术家的概念是如何将那些不符合传统定义的人排除在外的?尽管现代早期的女艺术家不容易被定性,但本评论中重点介绍的三本书都考虑了 1450 年至 1800 年的女艺术家,以及那些不符合典型职业化资格的女艺术家。巴贝特-博恩(Babette Bohn)的《现代早期博洛尼亚的女艺术家、她们的赞助人和她们的公众》(Women Artists, their Patrons, and their Publics in Early Modern Bologna)和《经她之手》(By her Hand:Eve Straussman-Pflanzer 和 Oliver Tostmann 编辑的《Artemisia Gentileschi and Women Artists in Italy, 1500-1800》将研究重点放在意大利。第三部著作《1450-1700 年欧洲早期现代宫廷中的女艺术家》由 Tanja L. Jones 编辑,将研究范围扩大到欧洲大陆。这三本著作都概述了各自选择的时间和地理区域。这些书中所讨论的女艺术家都符合三种原型中的一种:作为艺术家的修女、宫廷艺术家或职业艺术家。这些特征意味着什么?任何一位女艺术家都能被可靠地归入其中一种类型吗?本次评述的这三本书通过强调自我塑造和女性艺术角色的各个方面来解决这些问题,这些方面依赖于社会影响,如阶级、婚姻状况以及与艺术生产和赞助网络的联系。连接这三部作品的一条共同线索是它们对琳达-诺克林作品的感激之情。这三本著作都表达了对诺克林以及她在 1971 年发表的开创性文章《为什么没有伟大的女艺术家?1 Bohn、Jones 以及 Straussman-Pflanzer 和 Tostmann 都将自己定位为该领域的第一人。Bohn 首次对博洛尼亚的女艺术家进行了全面的研究,Jones 收集了第一本专门研究欧洲大陆宫廷中作为视觉和物质文化生产者的女性的论文集,Straussman-Pflanzer 和 Tostmann 则促成了在美国两家最古老的民间艺术博物馆(沃兹沃斯-雅典娜姆艺术博物馆和底特律艺术学院)举办的首次专门针对早期现代意大利女艺术家的展览。这些出版物都是 "首创",为研究早期现代女性做出了亟需的贡献。巴贝特-博恩(Babette Bohn)的这本书是一本令人愉快的读物,它记录了现代早期博洛尼亚职业女性艺术家的大量涌现。Bohn 的论点是通过档案中的信息形成的。她通过大量的档案工作发掘了 68 位艺术家,首次对博洛尼亚的女艺术家进行了全面研究。Bohn 按时间顺序研究了博洛尼亚杰出的文学、宗教和艺术女性,从而为博洛尼亚作为女性艺术家天堂的声誉提供了背景资料。这些女性被称为 "女画家"(pittrici),其中包括画家、雕塑家、版画家、刺绣女工和绘画女工。与其他艺术家相比,她更偏爱画家,部分原因是档案证据和伊丽莎白-西拉尼(Elisabetta Sirani)的突出地位,而其他博洛尼亚女艺术家则与之形成鲜明对比。Bohn 将她的书分为两部分。第一部分追溯了职业女艺术家的历史背景、传记和发展历程。第二部分是主题性的,揭示了赞助和收藏的模式,研究了女艺术家的签名和自我塑造,并分析了她们创作的素描和版画。
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来源期刊
PARERGON
PARERGON MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES-
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
53
期刊介绍: Parergon publishes articles and book reviews on all aspects of medieval and early modern studies. It has a particular focus on research which takes new approaches and crosses traditional disciplinary boundaries. Fully refereed and with an international Advisory Board, Parergon is the Southern Hemisphere"s leading journal for early European research. It is published by the Australian and New Zealand Association of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (Inc.) and has close links with the ARC Network for Early European Research.
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