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Kirsten Swinth

    Kirsten Swinth est professeure associée d'histoire et d'études américaines, dont le travail se concentre sur les femmes artistes et le développement de l'art américain moderne. Elle analyse leur position et leurs contributions durant une période charnière de l'histoire de l'art américain. Son écriture explore les contextes sociaux et culturels qui ont façonné les carrières artistiques des femmes. Elle examine comment les artistes féminines se sont imposées dans le monde de l'art de l'époque et ont influencé son évolution.

    Feminism's Forgotten Fight
    Painting Professionals
    • Painting Professionals

      • 328pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      4,0(13)Évaluer

      Thousands of women pursued artistic careers in the United States during the late nineteenth century. According to census figures, the number of women among the ranks of professional artists rose from 10 percent to nearly 50 percent between 1870 and 1890. Examining the effects of this change, Kirsten Swinth explores how women's growing presence in the American art world transformed both its institutions and its ideology.Swinth traces the careers of women painters in New York, Philadelphia, and Boston, opening and closing her book with discussion of the two most famous women artists of the period--Mary Cassatt and Georgia O'Keeffe. Perhaps surprisingly, Swinth shows that in the 1870s and 1880s men and women easily crossed the boundaries separating conventionally masculine and feminine artistic territories to compete with each other as well as to join forces to professionalize art training, manage a fluid and unpredictable art market, and shape the language of art criticism. By the 1890s, however, women artists faced a backlash. Ultimately, Swinth argues, these gender contests spilled beyond the world of art to shape twentieth-century understandings of high culture and the formation of modernism in profound ways.

      Painting Professionals
    • Feminism's Forgotten Fight

      • 339pages
      • 12 heures de lecture

      Kirsten Swinth reconstructs the comprehensive vision of feminism's second wave at a time when its principles are under renewed attack. In the struggle for equality at home and at work, it was not feminism that failed to deliver on the promise that women can have it all, but a society that balked at making the changes for which activists fought.

      Feminism's Forgotten Fight