
Lunchtime Lecture Drawing Transformed: Women Artists in 19th-Century France
Venue
Lunchtime Lecture Drawing Transformed: Women Artists in 19th-Century France
11150 East Blvd
Cleveland, 44106, Ohio, United States
Speaker:
Britanty Salsbury, Associate Curator of Prints and Drawing
Britanty Salsbury, Associate Curator of Prints and Drawing
Come to the CMA for a quick bite of art history. Every first Tuesday of each month, join curators, conservators, scholars, and other museum staff for 30-minute talks on objects currently on display in the museum galleries.
Drawing transformed radically in 19th-century France and became an independent medium used by artists for exploration and experimentation. Although this moment in art history is often associated with male artists, from Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres to Edgar Degas, women played an important role in the history of drawing. Britany Salsbury, associate curator of prints and drawings, highlights their influence by taking a closer look at works by and influenced by women included in the exhibition Nineteenth-Century French Drawings from the Cleveland Museum of Art.
Drawing transformed radically in 19th-century France and became an independent medium used by artists for exploration and experimentation. Although this moment in art history is often associated with male artists, from Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres to Edgar Degas, women played an important role in the history of drawing. Britany Salsbury, associate curator of prints and drawings, highlights their influence by taking a closer look at works by and influenced by women included in the exhibition Nineteenth-Century French Drawings from the Cleveland Museum of Art.
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Artwork: Mademoiselle Louise Riesener in a Hat (detail), c. 1877–80. Berthe Morisot (French, 1841–1895). Pastel on pale blue laid paper; 75.3 x 66.2 x 4.5 cm.