The Exceptional Woman: Elisabeth Vigee Le Brun and the Cultural Politics of Art

The Exceptional Woman: Elisabeth Vigee Le Brun and the Cultural Politics of Art

by Mary Sheriff (Author), Mary D. D. Sheriff (Author)

Synopsis

Elisabeth Vigee-Lebrun (1755-1842) was an enormously successful painter, a favourite portraitist of Marie-Antoinette, and one of the few women accepted into the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture. In accounts of her role as an artist, she was simultaneously flattered as a charming woman and vilified as monstrously unfeminine. In this study Mary D. Sheriff uses Vigee-Lebrun's career to explore the contradictory position of woman-artist in the moral, philosophical, professional, and medical debates about women in 18th-century France. Paying particular attention to painted and textual self-portraits, Sheriff shows how Vigee-Lebrun's images and memoirs undermined the assumptions about woman and the strictures imposed on women. Engaging ancien-regime philosophy, as well as modern feminism, psychoanalysis, literary theory, and art criticism, Sheriff's interpretations of Vigee-Lebrun's paintings challenge us to rethink the work and the world of this controversial woman artist.

$49.74

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20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 368
Edition: New edition
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Published: 06 Nov 1997

ISBN 10: 0226752828
ISBN 13: 9780226752822

Author Bio
Mary D. Sheriff (1950-2016) was the W. R. Kenan, Jr. Distinguished Professor of Art and department chair at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Her scholarship focused on 18th- and 19th-century French art and culture.