Building on the momentum of recent bestsellers like Katy Hessel's The Story of Art Without Men, Painting her pleasure spotlights three extraordinary women who defied convention in the male-dominated world of early 20th-century Paris. Suzanne Valadon, Emilie Charmy, and Marie Vassilieff boldly claimed the nude- one of art's most enduring and contested subjects-as their own.
These trailblazing artists shattered taboos with their depictions of the male nude, the Black female nude, the pregnant nude, and even the rare nude self-portrait. Their work not only challenged the boundaries of modernism but also paved the way for later feminist artists and thinkers.
Lauren Jimerson's meticulously researched and beautifully written account places these women at the heart of the avant-garde, revealing the cultural stereotypes and gender regimes they worked against. Complete with numerous previously unpublished images, including 16 pages of colour illustrations, the book offers a fresh and intersectional feminist perspective on class, privilege, and race alongside gender.
Whether you're an art historian, a feminist scholar, or simply someone inspired by stories of creative defiance, Painting her pleasure is an essential addition to your collection. -- .
Rezensionen / Stimmen
'Cleanly dismantles one of the enduring myths of twentieth-century modernism: that ground zero in advancing the avant-garde was the female nude - as painted in Paris by two men.'
Bridget Quinn, Hyperallergic
'Painting Her Pleasure is a rare treat... the book as a whole adds considerably to current thinking on representations of female pleasure.' - French Studies Journal -- .
Sprache
Verlagsort
Illustrationen
28 colour illustrations, 33 black & white illustrations
Maße
Höhe: 250 mm
Breite: 175 mm
Dicke: 22 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-5261-5983-0 (9781526159830)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Lauren Jimerson, PhD is a Paris-based art historian specialising in women artists and modern European art. Her work has been recognised through grants from the Mellon Foundation as well as a Fulbright Scholarship to France. Jimerson has contributed to exhibitions on women artists at museums such as the Barnes Foundation, Musee de Montmartre, Musee du Luxembourg and Centre Pompidou Metz. Her expertise has also led her to appearances on NBC's The Today Show and France 24 as an art history commentator. Beyond her research, she lectures to diverse audiences through her online art history platform Art with Friends and in museums across the globe. -- .
Introduction
1 'Ni homme, ni femme': Marie Vassilieff's androgynous bodies
2 Painting pleasure: Emilie Charmy and an aesthetics of female jouissance
3 Suzanne Valadon and the embodied female subject
Conclusion
Index -- .