Brushed aside The untold story of women in art

Noah Charney

Book - 2023

"How many female artists can you name? Artemisia Gentileschi, Frida Kahlo, Georgia O'Keefe? Here's a 360-degree look at the role women have played in art history, including the influence and empowerment of women through art beyond those who have taken up a brush or a chisel"--

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Subjects
Genres
History
Published
Lanham : Rowman & Littlefield [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Noah Charney (author)
Other Authors
Ingrid D. (Ingrid Drake) Rowland (writer of foreword), Marina Abramović (writer of afterword)
Physical Description
215 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781538170991
  • List of Artworks
  • Foreword
  • Acknowledgments
  • A Note from the Author
  • Introduction
  • Part 1. The Movements without Men
  • Chapter 1. Renaissance to Realism
  • Chapter 2. Salons and Academies
  • Chapter 3. Concept and Statement
  • Chapter 4. Performance and Feminism
  • Part 2. Beyond the Creators
  • Chapter 5. Courtly Patrons and Collectors
  • Chapter 6. Modern Influencers
  • Chapter 7. Critics and Scholars
  • Afterword
  • Selected Bibliography
  • Notes
  • Index of Great Women (and a Few Men)
  • About the Author
  • 2.7. Tamara de Lempicka's Portrait of a Man or Mr Tadeusz de Lempicki (1928)
  • 2.8. Romaine Brooks's Self-Portrait (1923)
  • 3.1. Dorothea Tanning's Eine Kieine Nachtmusik (1943)
  • 3.2. Anna Mary Robertson, "Grandma" Moses's Cambridge Valley (1942)
  • 3.3. Kara Walker's African/American (1998)
  • 3.4. Georgia O'Keeffe's Cow Skull with Calico Roses (1931)
  • 3.5. Anni Albers's Ancient Writing (1936)
  • 3.6. Hilma af Klint's Altarbild NR1 (1915)
  • 4.1. Judy Chicago's The Dinner Party (1970-1979)
  • 4.2. Maya Lin's Submission for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial design competition (1981)
  • 4.3. Guerrilla Girls' Do Women Have to Be Naked to Get into the Met Museum? (1989)
  • 4.4. Marina Abramovic's Rhythm O (1974)
  • 5.1. Thomas de Leu's Portrait of Catherine de Medici (circa 1589)
  • 5.2. Francois Clouet's Lady in Her Bath (1571)
  • 5.3. Elisabeth-Louise Vigée Le Brim's Marie Antoinette in Court Dress (1778)
  • 7.1. Peter Hujar's Susan Sontag (1975)
  • 7.2. Emory University's Flyer for Linda Nochlin Lecture (1983)
Review by Booklist Review

As he did in The 12-Hour Art Expert (2022), Charney offers an accessible, different, and fascinating look at art history. Here his "goal is to provide a broad, multi-angled view of how women have shaped the story of art." In addition to recognizing the still-underappreciated legacy of women artists, he also chronicles the equally important and freshly interesting contributions of women as collectors, patrons, critics, curators, scholars, influencers, and more. The first part covers women artists across a wide span of time and art movements, from "Renaissance to Realism" to "Salons and Academies" to "Concept and Statement" to "Performance and Feminism." The second half, "Beyond the Creators," portrays women in key supporting roles, ensuring that art is seen, understood, and preserved. Charney's survey goes a long way in filling in the gaps in art history caused by years of male-biased perspectives. Crisp color illustrations, a selected bibliography, and extensive notes enhance this enlightening and enjoyable volume. Art lovers and researchers alike will find much to appreciate in this unusually inclusive and expert celebration of women in art.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this breezy and illuminating survey, art historian Charney (The Devil in the Gallery) spotlights female artists, patrons, curators, influencers, critics, scholars, models, and muses who shaped the art world. He notes that women are thought to have created 75% of cave handprints, making them some of "the very oldest painters in history," while Catharina van Hemessen (1528--1565) was the first person to paint a self-portrait of an artist at work. Louise Jopling (1843--1933), the first woman admitted to the Royal Society of British Artists, was "as important a political figure as she was a painter" and campaigned for women's right to vote; sculptor Augusta Savage (1892--1962) established in 1932 New York City the first art studio helmed by a "prominent artist" that enrolled Black students. Meanwhile, untrained artist and mother-of-five Janet Sobel (1893--1968) pioneered drip painting--preceding Jackson Pollock's use of the method--though she was often overlooked by art critics who derisively cast her as a "Brooklyn housewife." While some entries are rather cursory (art collector Peggy Guggenheim, for instance, occupies only one page), those seeking an accessible introduction to women's art history will be pleased by Charney's lucid prose and faithful renderings of these often-overlooked figures both as artists and as unique, distinctive personalities. It's worth checking out. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An encyclopedic series of short biographies focused on overlooked women in art history. In this "herstory," Charney, a professor of art history and author of The Devil in the Gallery and The Collector of Lives, aims to "teach the history of art using only female artists." While he succeeds at finding representatives for each major historical movement, the author frequently leans too far into his subjects' lives and omits descriptions of their work. The book is underillustrated, many features are forgettable due to their lack of visual information, and Charney rarely paints a picture with his prose. This is particularly frustrating as he explicitly touts the importance of balancing biography with art appreciation. Regarding Judith and Holofernes, a violent work by baroque master Artemisia Gentileschi that was likely influenced by her own history of sexual abuse, Charney writes, "this masterpiece should be considered as a great artwork unto itself, avoiding an over-focus on Artemisia's biography that turns the work's analysis into a revenge fantasy while ignoring its technical brilliance." Despite this, much of the text is too focused on biography. To his credit, Charney offers a unique twist and expands the scope of his history to include women patrons and collectors, many of whom were instrumental in the formation of major museums. He closes with a new take on Linda Nochlin's 1971 essay "Why Have There Been No Great Women Artists?" offering a lukewarm urge to reframe the discussion. He finds her argument "concerning, potentially destructive to the art historical narrative, to empowering women, to giving credit to those heroines of the past. The same point can be made in a supportive, inclusive way." Unfortunately, Charney's book falls short of being empowering, as the cascading biographies eclipse the spirit of his subjects. Readers intrigued by the subject should turn to Katy Hessel's The Story of Art Without Men. A well-intentioned but underdeveloped new perspective in art's discourse. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. We're supposed to think that Jackson Pollock invented drip painting, and with it the American branch of Abstract Expressionism. He did, didn't he? So say Life and Time magazine and countless art history books and professors in dimly lit lecture halls, their brows tinted by the light from the projector, their words backed by the windy hum of its motor. The first drip, or all-around painting--made by the revolutionary technique of splattering and dripping paint on the fly while approaching the canvas from all angles, as it lay on the floor--was Pollock's 1947 Galaxy. Wasn't it? It makes for a good story. Pollock was the macho, hard-drinking, Wyoming-raised cowboy of postwar American art--Hemingway with a paint bucket. Painting within the lines, the traditional way, wasn't manly enough for a rebel like him. And he certainly made a name for himself. He remains one of the two most famous American painters, along with Andy Warhol. Americans, especially American men in the 1940s and 1950s, blazed trails and cast their shadows across the globe. This is the narrative that we've been taught. And it's all wrong. Or rather, it's been airbrushed and skewed to fit this idea that men, particularly American men, are the trailblazers. This is so in just about every sphere, but in our case, we're talking about art. Insert audible sigh and rolling of the eyes here. That's what this book seeks to correct. For what has so often been overlooked or airbrushed out--brushed aside (pun intended)--is the role of women in the story of art. As artists, of course, but there are other books that showcase women artists (though in a different way than we will here). I'm interested in shining the spotlight on the overshadowed role of women in all aspects of art and its history. Not just as artists, but also as patrons, curators, influencers, critics, scholars, models, muses, and more. The result will, I hope, show a 360-degree view of women in art. So, how do we make the history of art into the herstory of art? Let's begin by gently bumping Jackson Pollock off his pedestal. Because all-over painting and the drip technique were actually invented by a Ukrainian grandmother. Excerpted from Brushed Aside: The Untold Story of Women in Art by Noah Charney All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.