Abstract

The subject of this issue of 19 might raise a series of questions: Who were the women writing about old masters? What do we know about these women? How and where were they able to see old masters? Where were they writing? There were in fact many women working across the period and an overview of research on these women reveals recurring themes, such as the importance of networks, travel, translation, and empirical research. Anna Jameson, while ridiculed by Ruskin for knowing ‘as much of art as the cat’, set a precedent for later generations of women writing at the end of the century. This article will initially consider women’s contributions to art writing and the patterns that emerged as the century progressed. The recent National Gallery exhibition ‘Reflections’ brought together Van Eyck and the Pre-Raphaelites, and in the second half of the article I will look at how the Victorian fascination with old masters re-emerges at the end of the century. The study of the early Renaissance in Italian painting was foregrounded by a group of writers, the best known being Roger Fry and Bernard Berenson. This article will ask how and where women in this circle foregrounded analysis of historical techniques. Two case studies will be considered: the National Gallery and the Whitechapel Art Gallery. Art writers discussed will include Julia Cartwright, Vernon Lee, and the writer and artist Christiana Herringham. I will argue that gallery spaces were a nexus for the development of expertise on early Renaissance techniques and their dissemination. The involvement of women in not just art writing, but exhibitions of ‘masterpieces’, offers insight into the shaping of art history at the fin de siecle.

Highlights

  • Art history as a discipline, it might be believed, was constructed by men

  • There is a substantial body of scholarship on women art writers in the nineteenth century which has opened up exciting new possibilities for research

  • Evidence indicates that women were very present in art galleries in the nineteenth century and recent scholarship has turned to the question of what women did in them

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Summary

Meaghan Clarke

The portrait frontispieces for essays in a volume titled The Books that Shaped Art History (2013) are almost entirely male. This article will take the art gallery as its focus It will explore the particularity of museum spaces in which women worked on old masters and the forms the work took. The mid-Victorian fascination with old masters explored in the recent National Gallery exhibition ‘Reflections: Van Eyck and the PreRaphaelites’ (2017–18) re-emerged at the end of the century.[3] The study of the early Renaissance in Italian painting was advocated by a group of writers and considerable scholarship has been devoted to the best known, Roger Fry and Bernard Berenson.[4] This article asks how and where women in this circle foregrounded analysis of historical techniques. The involvement of women in not just art writing, but exhibitions of ‘masterpieces’, offers insight into the shaping of art history at the fin de siècle

The National Gallery
The Whitechapel Art Gallery
Full Text
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