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Product Description
At the end of the nineteenth century, the art worlds of Paris and Boston saw the rise to prominence of American portrait painter Anna Klumpke (1856-1942). This first detailed study of Klumpke, who is best known for her portraits and biography of her companion, renowned French artist Rosa Bonheur, traces her remarkable life and career against the backdrop of fin-de-sicle culture. Drawing on a wide spectrum of sources from art history to psychology, Britta Dwyer's account goes beyond traditional biography by addressing such themes as the choices available to women in the arts, the social and artistic obstacles faced by women artists in the male-dominated art community, female relationships, and the importance of women's patronage. Dwyer begins by describing how Klumpke's formative years were shaped by her career-oriented mother and sisters and other American women artists living in Paris. She then discusses Klumpke's growing reputation as a Salon exhibitor, recounts her years in Boston, and relates the dramatic turn in Klumpke's life when she was invited in 1898 to paint the portrait of Rosa Bonheur. Dwyer provides new evidence of the meaningful and romantic partnership between these two creative women-a relationship that ended abruptly with Bonheur's death a year after they met. Anna Klumpke's private and professional journey reflects the controversial and complex concerns for women of her era and sheds light on issues that remain pressing for women of today. This captivating biography offers an intriguing case study of turn-of-the century culture and faithfully recovers one woman's place in the context of her times.
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