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Her self portrayed: Australian women's self-portraits between the wars 1918-1939Williams, Kristina Eleanor Unknown Date (has links) (PDF)
The subject of this dissertation is female self-portraiture in Australia of the interwar years, 1918 to 1939. The primary concern of this thesis is to consider self-portraiture as a conceptual process. Self-portrayal is understood as an act of cultural invention rather than an unmediated access to an essential core self. It is this invention and what is entailed in the process of self-imagining, rather than any formal analysis of the style, which is of greatest concern. (For complete abstract open document)
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Landscape and nature in American prints : transformations in form and meaning in the work of contemporary women artists /Haertel, Nilza Belita Grau, January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Indiana University, Dept. of Fine Arts- History of Art, 2006.
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Muse as artist : selected artists past and present /Mantooth, Jennifer R. January 1992 (has links)
Thesis (M.F.A)--Rochester Institute of Technology, 1992. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references.
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A hermeneutic study of selected paintings of woman religious artists of the twelfth and twentieth centuriesMcGuire, Therese Benedict. January 1986 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--New York University, School of Education, Health, Nursing and Arts Professions, 1986. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves [623]-668).
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Lilian Westcott Hale and Nancy Hale from Victorian to modern in art and text /Lind, Norah Hardin. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Virginia Commonwealth University, 2010. / Prepared for: Dept. of English. Title from title-page of electronic thesis. Includes bibliographical references.
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Folk Networks, Cyberfeminism, and Information Activism in the Art+Feminism Wikipedia Edit-a-thon SeriesWyer, Sarah 06 September 2017 (has links)
This thesis explores how the Art+Feminism Wikipedia Edit-a-thon event impacts the people who coordinate and participate in it. I review museum catalogs to determine institutional representation of women artists, and then examine the Edit-a-thon as a vernacular event on two levels: national and local. The founders have a shared vision of combating perceived barriers to participation in editing Wikipedia, but their larger goal is to address the biases in Wikipedia’s content. My interviews with organizers of the local Eugene, Oregon, edit-a-thon revealed that the network connections possible via the Internet platform of the event did not supersede the importance of face-to-face interaction and vernacular expression during the editing process. The results of my fieldwork found a clear ideological connection to the national event through the more localized satellite edit-a-thons. Both events pursue the consciousness-raising goal of information activism and the construction of a community that advocates for women’s visibility online.
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The "new woman" in fin-de-siécle art: Frances and Margaret MacDonaldHelland, Janice Valerie 26 June 2018 (has links)
Scottish artists Margaret and Frances Macdonald
produced their most innovative art during the last decade of
the nineteenth century. They received their training at the
Glasgow School of Art and became known for their
contribution to "the Glasgow Style," Scotland's answer to
Continental Art nouveau and Symbolism. Although they
inherited their visual vocabulary from the male-dominated
language of the fin-de-siècle, they produced representations
of women that differed from those made by their male
colleagues. I suggest that these representations were
informed by the female experience and that they must be
understood as such if we, as historians, are to discuss
their art. Like many other women artists from this period,
the Macdonalds relied heavily upon so-called feminine
imagery. This could be flower painting, "dainty"
landscapes, pictures of children or pictures of "lovely"
women. The Macdonalds strayed from conventional meaning,
however, and made pictures of women that, while retaining
the mystery of symbolism, presented the viewer with
contextually accurate representations of women who were
bound and restricted by a society that had not yet allowed
women the vote. I suggest that these representations be
considered in the light of recent theoretical developments
in feminist literary criticism and feminist film theory
which give credence to women as producers of culture while remaining
aware that culture is a patriarchal construction. My contention is
that if we can comprehend the patriarchal construct of woman during
the fin-de-siècle then we may be able to understand how the
Macdonalds (and other women like them) strayed from this
representation and made their own images (perhaps in their own
likeness or at least in the likeness of their situation). Knowledge
about how women's experience was integrated into the visual language
may lead us to a greater understanding of that experience and its
subsequent production as art and, in addition, may bring about a
greater valuation of women's experience and its representation. / Graduate
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No strangers to beauty : contemporary black female artists, Saartje Baartman and the Hottentot Venus bodySkelly, Julia January 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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Differencing men's modern art, historical review of Pan Yuliang's xiesheng and the theme of women's culture.January 2012 (has links)
Chau, Tsz Kin. / "December 2011." / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2012. / Includes bibliographical references. / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / Introduction --- p.1 / Chapter Chapter 1 --- Who's Pan Yuliang? Whose Pan Yuliang? --- p.7 / Who's Pan Yuliang? --- p.7 / Life and Art of Pan Yuliang: Existing Account --- p.12 / Whose Pan Yuliang? --- p.22 / "Summary of Existing Accounts: Biography, Oedipus complex and Narcissism" --- p.30 / Chapter Chapter 2 --- Reconsidering Pan Yuliang --- p.33 / Academic works in Mainland China and Taiwan since 2000 --- p.33 / Theorizing the Woman Painter --- p.42 / Background I: Modern Art in Republican China --- p.54 / Background II: Paris Modernism --- p.60 / Chapter Chapter 3 --- Expanding Biography into History --- p.63 / Chapter Chapter 4 --- The Political Xiesheng and its Gender Politics --- p.82 / "Pan Yuliang: from Shanghai (1928-32, 36-37) to Nanjing (1933-35)" --- p.83 / The Mission ofNanjang: National Administering of Modernism --- p.86 / Pan Yuliang and the Chinese Arts Association --- p.97 / Xiesheng and a New Woman/painter Subject --- p.113 / Conclusion: a Different Modern for a Woman Painter --- p.123 / Chapter Chapter 5 --- Differencing the Modern and Women's Culture --- p.127 / Theorizing Women's Culture --- p.130 / Pan Yuliang and Women's Community --- p.134 / Contextualizing Women's Community: Republican Modernity and Post-war / Pacifism --- p.137 / Conclusion: Women's Art and Modernism --- p.145 / Conclusion Rethinking Republican and Women's Art --- p.146 / Appendix --- p.150 / Glossary --- p.158 / Graphical Materials --- p.165 / Bibliography --- p.251
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An exploration of female physicality and psyche and how these inform art-makingPoole, Tanya Katherine January 2000 (has links)
This thesis proposes that female physicality informs the psyche and thus in turn, art-making. My argument will be shown to be apposite and informative to the discussion of the work of Paula Rego, Jenny Saville and Cindy Sherman. Furthermore such an understanding is helpful to a reading of my practice. In examining issues of identity, which contribute to the formulation of a distinctly female psyche, I will base my critique on the philosophical positions of Sartre, de Beauvoir and Paglia.
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