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Angelica Kauffmann

A Woman of Immense Talent

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A founding member of the Royal Academy of Arts, Angelica Kauffman (1741-1807) was a star. A portrait painter, history painter, printmaker and designer known in her lifetime as one of the wealthiest bourgeois women of her era, she was called "perhaps the most cultivated woman in Europe," by the German philosopher J. G. Herder. History painting might have been the way to prestige, but it was Kauffmann's portraits that opened avenues to an international aristocratic and intellectual social world. This volume gathers approximately 150 works, and is the first publication to rigorously connect them to her personal history and to London and Rome, where she lived. Kauffmann settled permanently in Rome in 1782, and made her home a welcome meeting place for artists and writers. Goethe, a regular, called her a "woman of immense talent," and his assessment is borne out, more than 200 years later, by this study of her work.

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Angelica Kauffmann, Tobias G. Natter, Angelika Kauffmann

Sprache
Erscheinungsdatum
2007
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(Hardcover)
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Titel
Angelica Kauffmann
Untertitel
A Woman of Immense Talent
Sprache
Englisch
Erscheinungsdatum
2007
Einband
Hardcover
Seitenzahl
286
ISBN10
3775719849
ISBN13
9783775719841
Reihe
Bewertung
4 von 5 Sternen
Beschreibung
A founding member of the Royal Academy of Arts, Angelica Kauffman (1741-1807) was a star. A portrait painter, history painter, printmaker and designer known in her lifetime as one of the wealthiest bourgeois women of her era, she was called "perhaps the most cultivated woman in Europe," by the German philosopher J. G. Herder. History painting might have been the way to prestige, but it was Kauffmann's portraits that opened avenues to an international aristocratic and intellectual social world. This volume gathers approximately 150 works, and is the first publication to rigorously connect them to her personal history and to London and Rome, where she lived. Kauffmann settled permanently in Rome in 1782, and made her home a welcome meeting place for artists and writers. Goethe, a regular, called her a "woman of immense talent," and his assessment is borne out, more than 200 years later, by this study of her work.