Female Printmakers, Printsellers, and Print Publishers in the Eighteenth Century (eBook, ePUB)
The Imprint of Women, c. 1700-1830
Redaktion: Martinez, Cristina S.; Roman, Cynthia E.
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Female Printmakers, Printsellers, and Print Publishers in the Eighteenth Century (eBook, ePUB)
The Imprint of Women, c. 1700-1830
Redaktion: Martinez, Cristina S.; Roman, Cynthia E.
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Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. März 2024
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781108956994
- Artikelnr.: 70910300
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Introduction: hidden legacies Cristina S. Martinez and Cynthia E. Roman;
Part I. Self-Presentation and Self-Promotion: 1. Show-offs: women's
self-portrait prints c. 1700 Madeleine C. Viljoen; 2. Maria hadfield
cosway's 'genius' for print: a didactic, commercial, and professional path
Paris A. Spies-Gans; 3. Caroline Watson and the theatre of printmaking
Heather McPherson; 4. 'Talent and untiring diligence': the print legacy of
Angelika Kauffmann, Marie Ellenrieder and Maria Katharina Prestel F. Carlo
Schmid; Part II. Spaces of Production: 5. 'Living in the bosom of a
numerous and worthy family': women printmakers learning to Engrave in late
eighteenth-century London Hannah Lyons; 6. Divine secrets of a printmaking
sisterhood: the professional and familial networks of the Horthemels and
Hémery sisters Kelsey. D. Martin; 7. Yielding an impression of women
printmakers in eighteenth-century France Rena M. Hoisington; 8. Laura
piranesi 'incise': a woman printmaker following in her father's footsteps
Rita Bernini; 9. Etchings by ladies, 'not artists' Cynthia E. Roman; Part
III. Competing in the Market: Acumen in Business and Law: 10. Mary Darly,
fun Merchant and Caricaturist Sheila O'Connell; 11. A changing industry:
women publishing and selling prints in London, 1740-1800 Amy Torbert; 12.
Jane Hogarth: A printseller's imprint on copyright law Cristina S.
Martinez; 13. Shells to satire: the career of Hannah Humphrey (1750-1818)
Tim Clayton; 14. Encouraging Rowlandson - the women who mattered Nicholas
JS Knowles; 15. Female printmakers and printsellers in the early American
republic: Eliza Cox Akin and Mary Graham Charles Allison M. Stagg.
Part I. Self-Presentation and Self-Promotion: 1. Show-offs: women's
self-portrait prints c. 1700 Madeleine C. Viljoen; 2. Maria hadfield
cosway's 'genius' for print: a didactic, commercial, and professional path
Paris A. Spies-Gans; 3. Caroline Watson and the theatre of printmaking
Heather McPherson; 4. 'Talent and untiring diligence': the print legacy of
Angelika Kauffmann, Marie Ellenrieder and Maria Katharina Prestel F. Carlo
Schmid; Part II. Spaces of Production: 5. 'Living in the bosom of a
numerous and worthy family': women printmakers learning to Engrave in late
eighteenth-century London Hannah Lyons; 6. Divine secrets of a printmaking
sisterhood: the professional and familial networks of the Horthemels and
Hémery sisters Kelsey. D. Martin; 7. Yielding an impression of women
printmakers in eighteenth-century France Rena M. Hoisington; 8. Laura
piranesi 'incise': a woman printmaker following in her father's footsteps
Rita Bernini; 9. Etchings by ladies, 'not artists' Cynthia E. Roman; Part
III. Competing in the Market: Acumen in Business and Law: 10. Mary Darly,
fun Merchant and Caricaturist Sheila O'Connell; 11. A changing industry:
women publishing and selling prints in London, 1740-1800 Amy Torbert; 12.
Jane Hogarth: A printseller's imprint on copyright law Cristina S.
Martinez; 13. Shells to satire: the career of Hannah Humphrey (1750-1818)
Tim Clayton; 14. Encouraging Rowlandson - the women who mattered Nicholas
JS Knowles; 15. Female printmakers and printsellers in the early American
republic: Eliza Cox Akin and Mary Graham Charles Allison M. Stagg.
Introduction: hidden legacies Cristina S. Martinez and Cynthia E. Roman;
Part I. Self-Presentation and Self-Promotion: 1. Show-offs: women's
self-portrait prints c. 1700 Madeleine C. Viljoen; 2. Maria hadfield
cosway's 'genius' for print: a didactic, commercial, and professional path
Paris A. Spies-Gans; 3. Caroline Watson and the theatre of printmaking
Heather McPherson; 4. 'Talent and untiring diligence': the print legacy of
Angelika Kauffmann, Marie Ellenrieder and Maria Katharina Prestel F. Carlo
Schmid; Part II. Spaces of Production: 5. 'Living in the bosom of a
numerous and worthy family': women printmakers learning to Engrave in late
eighteenth-century London Hannah Lyons; 6. Divine secrets of a printmaking
sisterhood: the professional and familial networks of the Horthemels and
Hémery sisters Kelsey. D. Martin; 7. Yielding an impression of women
printmakers in eighteenth-century France Rena M. Hoisington; 8. Laura
piranesi 'incise': a woman printmaker following in her father's footsteps
Rita Bernini; 9. Etchings by ladies, 'not artists' Cynthia E. Roman; Part
III. Competing in the Market: Acumen in Business and Law: 10. Mary Darly,
fun Merchant and Caricaturist Sheila O'Connell; 11. A changing industry:
women publishing and selling prints in London, 1740-1800 Amy Torbert; 12.
Jane Hogarth: A printseller's imprint on copyright law Cristina S.
Martinez; 13. Shells to satire: the career of Hannah Humphrey (1750-1818)
Tim Clayton; 14. Encouraging Rowlandson - the women who mattered Nicholas
JS Knowles; 15. Female printmakers and printsellers in the early American
republic: Eliza Cox Akin and Mary Graham Charles Allison M. Stagg.
Part I. Self-Presentation and Self-Promotion: 1. Show-offs: women's
self-portrait prints c. 1700 Madeleine C. Viljoen; 2. Maria hadfield
cosway's 'genius' for print: a didactic, commercial, and professional path
Paris A. Spies-Gans; 3. Caroline Watson and the theatre of printmaking
Heather McPherson; 4. 'Talent and untiring diligence': the print legacy of
Angelika Kauffmann, Marie Ellenrieder and Maria Katharina Prestel F. Carlo
Schmid; Part II. Spaces of Production: 5. 'Living in the bosom of a
numerous and worthy family': women printmakers learning to Engrave in late
eighteenth-century London Hannah Lyons; 6. Divine secrets of a printmaking
sisterhood: the professional and familial networks of the Horthemels and
Hémery sisters Kelsey. D. Martin; 7. Yielding an impression of women
printmakers in eighteenth-century France Rena M. Hoisington; 8. Laura
piranesi 'incise': a woman printmaker following in her father's footsteps
Rita Bernini; 9. Etchings by ladies, 'not artists' Cynthia E. Roman; Part
III. Competing in the Market: Acumen in Business and Law: 10. Mary Darly,
fun Merchant and Caricaturist Sheila O'Connell; 11. A changing industry:
women publishing and selling prints in London, 1740-1800 Amy Torbert; 12.
Jane Hogarth: A printseller's imprint on copyright law Cristina S.
Martinez; 13. Shells to satire: the career of Hannah Humphrey (1750-1818)
Tim Clayton; 14. Encouraging Rowlandson - the women who mattered Nicholas
JS Knowles; 15. Female printmakers and printsellers in the early American
republic: Eliza Cox Akin and Mary Graham Charles Allison M. Stagg.