At Home in the Studio

The Professionalization of Women Artists in America

Laura R Prieto author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Harvard University Press

Published:27th Jan '02

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

At Home in the Studio cover

This engaging cultural history examines the emergence of a professional identity for American women artists. By focusing on individual sculptors, painters, and illustrators, Laura Prieto gives us a compelling picture of the prospects and constraints faced by women artists in the United States from the late eighteenth century through the 1930s.

Prieto tracks the transformation from female artisans and ladies with genteel "artistic accomplishments" to middle-class professional artists. Domestic spaces and familial metaphors helped legitimate the production of art by women. Expression of sexuality and representation of the nude body, on the other hand, posed problems for these artists. Women artists at first worked within their separate sphere, but by the end of the nineteenth century "New Women" grew increasingly uncomfortable with separatism, wanting ungendered recognition. With the twentieth century came striking attempts to reconcile domestic lives and careers with new expectations; these decades also ruptured the women's earlier sense of community with amateur women artists in favor of specifically professional allegiances. This study of a diverse group of women artists--diverse in critical reception, geographic location, race, and social background--reveals a forgotten aspect of art history and women's history.

Prieto reconstructs a substantial chronology for women artists in the US...Two tendencies that wax and wane over a century are traced: the drive to be an artist and the desire to be a woman, both providing a basis for professionalization...[Prieto] demonstrates an ability to read works of art, interweaving their visual narratives into the context of women's artistic development. Highly recommended. -- E. K. Menon * Choice *

  • Nominated for John Hope Franklin Publication Prize 2002
  • Nominated for Joan Kelly Memorial Prize in Women's History 2002
  • Nominated for Bancroft Prize 2002
  • Nominated for Distinguished Book Award - Sociology of Religion 2002

ISBN: 9780674004863

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 626g

304 pages