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MCS,MBA(IT), Pursuing PHD
Devry University
Sep-2004 - Aug-2010
Assistant Financial Analyst
NatSteel Holdings Pte Ltd
Aug-2007 - Jul-2017
This is a discussion question:
Select two (2) paintings depicting females by both a male artist and female artist named within the Explore section. Compare and contrast these two (2) depictions of women, and comment on any general tendencies that you detect among artists of that era in this respect. Compare this situation in the late 1800s to the way females are depicted in our own modern times, using at least one (1) specific modern example.
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· National Museum of Women in the Arts at http://www.nmwa.org/explore/collection-highlights/18th%E2%80%9319th-century
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· National Gallery of Art (search by artist name) at http://www.nga.gov/content/ngaweb/Collection/artists.html?pageNumber=1
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To succeed as professional artists in 18th- and 19th-century Europe and the United States, women still had to navigate gender-specific artistic and social hierarchies.
For most of the period, art education and professional recognition for women remained separate and unequal to that of their male peers. In late 18th-century France, the prestigious Académie des Beaux Arts limited female membership to four; the Royal Academy of Arts in England had only two female founding members. Nonetheless, many well-trained and sought-after women artists flourished in this period.
Not until the second half of the 19th century did women artists make significant progress, especially in France. More art schools opened their doors to women, prominent dealers represented them, and public institutions acquired their work.Â
In the United States, women gradually became a force on the American art scene, winning prestigious commissions and awards. They participated in notable exhibitions, taught in art schools, and wrote as art critics. Many traveled abroad, and their works served as conduits for new styles in painting, printmaking, and the newest artistic medium, photography.Â
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