'… this original approach to the portraiture of eighteenth-century theatre is entertaining and illuminating.' Angela Escott, The Times Literary Supplement

This Element looks at the art of the actress in the eighteenth century. It considers how visual materials across genres, such as prints, portraits, sculpture, costumes, and accessories, contribute to the understanding of the nuances of female celebrity, fame, notoriety, and scandal. The 'art' of the actress refers to the actress represented in visual art, as well as to the actress's labor and skill in making art ephemerally through performance and tangibly through objects. Moving away from the concept of the 'actress as muse,' a relationship that privileges the role of the male artist over the inspirational subject, the author focuses instead on the varied significance of representations, reproductions, and re-animations of actresses, female artists, and theatrical women across media. Via case studies, the Element explores how the archive charts both a familiar and at times unknown narrative about female performers of the past.
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Introduction: the art of the actress in the eighteenth century; 1. The paradox of pearls; 2. The actress as artist and the artist as actress: Anne Damer and Angelica Kauffman; 3. Mary Anne's Muff: Actresses and satire; 4. Epilogue: unfinished business: Elizabeth Inchbald, Lady Cahir, Sir Thomas Lawrence, and the aftermath of the art of the actress; References.
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The Art of the Actress in the Eighteenth Century considers how visual materials shape our understanding of female celebrity.

Product details

ISBN
9781108977906
Published
2024-02-08
Publisher
Cambridge University Press; Cambridge University Press
Weight
135 gr
Height
229 mm
Width
152 mm
Thickness
4 mm
Age
G, 01
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
84

Author