August 5, 2024
European Fine art

Baltimore Museum Of Art Exhibition Adds Much Needed Depth And Breadth To European Art History


Anyone expecting the Baltimore Museum of Art’s groundbreaking survey of European women artists from 1400-1800 to simply ascend a group of overlooked female painters to a heightened status equal that of their male contemporaries, think again. The show does something more important than that.

“Making Her Mark: A History of Women Artists in Europe, 1400-1800” demands equality between not only genders, but mediums, giving art history not only more depth, but also more breadth.

While scholarship about historic women artists has seen an increase in recent years, these efforts remain largely focused on an elite group of artists working in large-scale painting and sculpture–think Artemesia Gentileschi. “Making Her Mark” expands our understanding and appreciation of women’s contributions to the history of Western art beyond the established dominance of painting and sculpture.

In novel fashion, “Making Her Mark” explores the variety of women’s artistic endeavors with works ranging from royal portraits and devotional sculpture to tapestries, printed books, drawings, clothing and lace, metalwork, ceramics, furniture, and other decorative objects—arguing for a reassessment of European art history to incorporate the true scale and range of their contributions.

No previous exhibition has presented such a thorough and diverse assortment of women’s artistic accomplishments from the period. These accomplishments were often produced on an intimate scale, delicate, designed for the home. They whisper.

Contrast that against acknowledged “masterpieces” from the period, the Sistine Chapel ceiling for instance, huge frescos and sculptures meant to be viewed in cathedrals shouting their brilliance.

“Making Her Mark” challenges “the ongoing gendered notions of the heroic and spectacular as the standard measures of quality, significance, and legitimacy in Western culture,” in the words of exhibition co-curator and the Baltimore Museum of Art’s Senior Curator and Department Head, Prints, Drawings & Photographs, Andaleeb Badiee Banta.

Furthermore, no exhibition has paid this much attention to women working collaboratively, in workshops, or out of the home. This also runs counter to how 500 years of Western Culture has been taught and valued.

“The fundamental format of Western art historical record is based on the biography,” Banta told Forbes.com. “Dating back to the Renaissance, artist Giorgio Vasari (1511-1574) wrote biographies of artists, mostly painters, (which) he construed as the epitome of artistic accomplishment.”

It’s right there in the title: “The Lives of the Most Eminent Painters, Sculptors and Architects.” First published in 1550, Vasari’s compilation of artist bios is chalk full of errors and gossip. While by no means comprehensive, scholarly or impartial, it nonetheless served as the wellspring from which populist European “fine art” history flowed for centuries. He and his book have been credited for “inventing art history.”

It privileged the individual. The male. The painting.

“Artists who worked in collective or workshop settings, or those who pursued artistic aims that did not subscribe to the male-determined categories of art that qualified as important or serious, namely large-scale painting or sculpture, were not addressed,” Banta said. “Because women makers were barred from learning alongside their male counterparts for centuries, much of what they made was relegated to categories that we now refer to as material culture rather than considered fine art, and their identities were either elided or never recorded in the first place. Vasari’s biography model established the historical norm that has been perpetuated until the present day in the format of the monograph or catalogue raisonne, from which most women’s artistic accomplishments have been omitted.”

Women’s Work

For centuries, women artists in Europe who achieved professional artistic careers were deemed anomalous or exceptional, while those who engaged in creative pursuits in the home were dismissed as amateurs. “Making Her Mark” corrects these commonly held beliefs by examining the different ways in which women contributed to the production of art and their pursuit of professional and commercial successes.

“This exhibition is committed to dispelling the myth of the ‘exceptional’ woman artist. While there were many notable women artists who lived extraordinary lives, like Artemisa Gentileschi, earning favor at royal courts and overcoming the restrictions that excluded them from traditional pathways to success, the majority of women makers’ experiences were far from exceptional,” Banta explains. “The gendered concept of exceptionalism—one that only recognizes the work of women artists who managed to achieve male-determined standards of success—has long excluded women who subscribed to different standards for creative making, and largely ignores the untold number of women who contributed to all stages of artistic production in the fields of manuscript illumination, printmaking and book publication, lace, textile production, small-scale sculpture and devotional objects, ceramics, silversmithing, furniture, paper quilling, and embroidery.”

On view collectively in “Making Her Mark,” works such as these demonstrate the many ways women played an integral role in the development of European art, culture, and commerce across more than 400 years. Ways extending beyond the making.

“The involvement of widows in the story of artistic production on the workshop or manufactory level is one that has been largely ignored in standard art historical narratives,” Banta said. “Since most women could not legally own businesses during this period, many widows continued their deceased husbands’ artistic businesses under their husbands’ names, ensuring that the workshop continued to operate and often bringing in new talent or promoting the business in profitable ways.”

Who knew?

“Another important factor is the role of silent or forced labor in artistic production. Many women and girls worked in manufactory settings to produce aspects of artistic production such as gilding carved wood details for furniture or frames, burnishing silver, decorating ceramic forms, or designing patterns for embroidery on high-end fashion accessories,” Banta said. “Women also played a significant role in the history of printed book publication and reproductive printmaking. Lace, one of the most expensive European textiles, was predominantly produced in convents and orphanages throughout this period by female makers whose names do not survive in the historical record.”

When the unidentified female makers are considered along with female collaborators and workshops, as well as the named female artists, and eminence is removed from painting, the foundational picture of Western art history transforms.

“We are hoping to change the way we think today about women makers of the past by proposing an alternate history of European art, one that centers women as creative makers, where they are considered by default rather than as an exception or as an anomaly,” Banta said.

A new way of seeing. A new way of thinking. More complete. More inclusive. More expansive. More accurate.

“Making Her Mark” opened at the Baltimore Museum of Art on October 1, 2023, and will be on view through January 7, 2024. The exhibition, co-organized with the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto, can be seen there from March 27 to July 1, 2024.

Follow me on Twitter or LinkedInCheck out my website





Source link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *