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Abigail Solomon-Godeau

    Abigail Solomon-Godeau est une critique d'art et historienne de l'art américaine. Son travail explore en profondeur l'histoire, les institutions et les pratiques de la photographie, l'examinant sous un angle féministe. Elle met l'accent sur un engagement critique envers les récits artistiques et les manières dont les médias visuels sont construits et interprétés. Ses essais et ses publications invitent à la réflexion sur les structures de pouvoir et les questions de genre dans l'art.

    Photography after Photography
    Male Trouble: A Crisis in Representation
    • Male Trouble: A Crisis in Representation

      • 264pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      4,2(25)Évaluer

      The exploration of masculinity and its representation in late eighteenth and early nineteenth-century art reveals a complex interplay between societal ideals and visual culture. Abigail Solomon-Godeau investigates the prominence of the male nude, its eventual overshadowing by the female form, and the feminization of male bodies during this period. By contextualizing these shifts within the backdrop of the French Revolution and Neoclassicism, she challenges traditional narratives and highlights the connections between artistic representation and the evolving status of women in society.

      Male Trouble: A Crisis in Representation
    • Photography after Photography

      • 288pages
      • 11 heures de lecture

      In essays analyzing the photography of luminaries such as Cindy Sherman, Robert Mapplethorpe, and Susan Meiselas, pioneering feminist art critic Abigail Solomon-Godeau extends her politically engaged and theoretically sophisticated inquiry into the historical and cultural circuits of power as they shape and inform the practice, criticism, and historiography of photography.

      Photography after Photography