Description

Book Synopsis
Sculpture was no occupation for a lady in Victorian Britain. Yet between 1837 and 1901 the number of professional female sculptors increased sixteen-fold. The four principal women sculptors of that era are the focus of this book. Once known for successful careers marked by commissions from the royal family, public bodies and private individuals, they are forgotten now. This book brings them back to light, addressing who they were, how they negotiated middle-class expectations and what kind of impact they had on changing gender roles.
Based on their unpublished letters, papers and diaries coupled with contemporary portrayals of female sculptors by novelists, critics, essayists and colleagues, this is an unprecedented picture of the women sculptors’ personal experience of preparing for and conducting careers as well as the public’s perception of them. The author examines each woman’s ability to use her position within the historical and cultural context as a platform from which to instigate change. The analytical emphasis throughout is on the art of negotiation and the result is an interdisciplinary work that delves deeply into the experience of an undervalued cohort of artists who had a disproportionate influence on Victorian social norms.

Trade Review
«This book is a wonderful addition to the CISRA series and will be enjoyed by anyone interested in Victorian culture.» (Béatrice Laurent, Cahiers victoriens et édouardiens 78, 2013)

Table of Contents
Contents: Family matters: the effects of family circumstances and expectations upon women’s decision to sculpt – Carving out a career: acquiring training, managing business, balancing demands of home and studio – Making their way: self-promotion without social disapproval, choice of career advisors – Characteristics and convictions: reinstating their individual identities, acknowledging themselves as self-conscious agents – Critical appraisals: the quality of women’s sculpture assessed alongside quality of critics’ judgements – Hoydens or heroines: representation of women sculptors in popular fiction, journalism, advice literature – Impacts: upon Victorian art world and nineteenth-century social culture.

Genteel Mavericks: Professional Women Sculptors

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    A Paperback / softback by Shannon Hunter Hurtado

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      Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
      Publication Date: 18/06/2012
      ISBN13: 9783034307567, 978-3034307567
      ISBN10: 303430756X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Sculpture was no occupation for a lady in Victorian Britain. Yet between 1837 and 1901 the number of professional female sculptors increased sixteen-fold. The four principal women sculptors of that era are the focus of this book. Once known for successful careers marked by commissions from the royal family, public bodies and private individuals, they are forgotten now. This book brings them back to light, addressing who they were, how they negotiated middle-class expectations and what kind of impact they had on changing gender roles.
      Based on their unpublished letters, papers and diaries coupled with contemporary portrayals of female sculptors by novelists, critics, essayists and colleagues, this is an unprecedented picture of the women sculptors’ personal experience of preparing for and conducting careers as well as the public’s perception of them. The author examines each woman’s ability to use her position within the historical and cultural context as a platform from which to instigate change. The analytical emphasis throughout is on the art of negotiation and the result is an interdisciplinary work that delves deeply into the experience of an undervalued cohort of artists who had a disproportionate influence on Victorian social norms.

      Trade Review
      «This book is a wonderful addition to the CISRA series and will be enjoyed by anyone interested in Victorian culture.» (Béatrice Laurent, Cahiers victoriens et édouardiens 78, 2013)

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Family matters: the effects of family circumstances and expectations upon women’s decision to sculpt – Carving out a career: acquiring training, managing business, balancing demands of home and studio – Making their way: self-promotion without social disapproval, choice of career advisors – Characteristics and convictions: reinstating their individual identities, acknowledging themselves as self-conscious agents – Critical appraisals: the quality of women’s sculpture assessed alongside quality of critics’ judgements – Hoydens or heroines: representation of women sculptors in popular fiction, journalism, advice literature – Impacts: upon Victorian art world and nineteenth-century social culture.

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