Florine Stettheimer
$45.00
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Trade Discount | 5 + | 25% |
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Description
This comprehensive biography establishes Florine Stettheimer as one of the most innovative artists of the early twentieth century. Florine Stettheimer was a feminist, multi-media artist who documented New York City’s growth as the center of cultural life, finance, and entertainment between the World Wars. During her first forty years, spent mostly in Europe, Florine Stettheimer studied academic painting and was aware of the earliest modernist styles prior to most American artists. Returning to New York, she and her sisters led an acclaimed salon for major avant-garde cultural figures including Marcel Duchamp, the Stieglitz circle, and numerous poets, dancers, and writers. During her life, Stettheimer showed her innovative paintings in more than forty of the most important museum exhibits and salons. She also wrote poetry, designed unique furniture, and gained international fame for the sets and costumes she created for the avant-garde opera, Four Saints in Three Acts. Stettheimer’s work was also socially progressive: she painted several identity-issue paintings, addressing African American segregation, Jewish bigotry, fluid sexuality, and women’s new independence.
This biography presents one of the first comprehensive readings of Stettheimer’s art. Barbara Bloemink establishes Stettheimer’s place as one of the twentieth century’s most significant and progressive artists and examines why her unique work remains relevant today. Barbara Bloemink is an expert on Florine Stettheimer’s work. She has written extensively on Stettheimer and co-curated the artist’s 1995 Whitney Museum Retrospective. Formerly the director and chief curator of five art museums, including the Smithsonian’s National Design Museum and the Guggenheim Hermitage Museum, Bloemink has curated over seventy exhibitions, published extensively, and lectured and taught internationally on art and design.
Introduction
chapter one
Origins: 1871–1890s
chapter two
Europe Influences: 1890–1915
chapter three
Return to New York: 1914–1915
chapter four
1916: The Pivotal Year
chapter five
A Uniquely Feminine, Subversive Style
chapter six
Courting Controversy: 1919–1927
chapter seven
Exploring Identity: Friends and Family 1922–1928
chapter eight
New York, New York: 1927–1933
chapter nine
Four Saints in Three Acts: 1928–1936
chapter ten
On Her Own: 1936–1949
chapter eleven
Epilogue
Exhibition History
Endnotes
Index
Selected Bibliography
Additional information
Dimensions | 1 × 8 × 10 in |
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