Elisabeth Vigée Le Brun
May, Gita.
Elisabeth Vigée Le Brun the odyssey of an artist in an age of revolution / [electronic resource] : Gita May. - New Haven [Conn.] : Yale University Press, c2005. - 237 p., 16 p. of plates : ill. (some col.).
Includes bibliographical references (p. 205-220) and index.
Early years -- First successes -- Marriage -- Marie-Antoinette's portraitist -- Vigée Le Brun salonnière -- 1789 -- Rome -- Naples, Venice, Milan -- Vienna -- The Russian experience -- Homeward bound -- The English interlude -- Return to imperial France -- An active old age.
The foremost woman artist of her age, Elisabeth Vigée Le Brun (1755-1842) exerted her considerable charm to become the friend, and then official portraitist, of Marie Antoinette. Though profitable, this role made her a public and controversial figure, and in 1789 it precipitated her exile. In a Europe torn by strife and revolution, this singularly gifted and high-spirited woman nevertheless managed to thrive as an independent, self-supporting artist, doggedly setting up studios in Rome, Naples, Venice, Milan, Vienna, St. Petersburg, and London. Long overlooked or dismissed, Vigée Le Brun's portraits now hang in the Louvre, in a room of their own, as well as in all leading art museums of the world. Illustrations include sixteen of her portraits presented in full color.--From publisher description.
Electronic reproduction.
Palo Alto, Calif. :
ebrary,
2013.
Available via World Wide Web.
Access may be limited to ebrary affiliated libraries.
GBA579254 bnb
Uk
Vigée-Lebrun, Louise-Elisabeth, 1755-1842.
Portrait painters--France--Biography.
Electronic books.
ND553.V5325 / M39 2005eb
759.4 B
Elisabeth Vigée Le Brun the odyssey of an artist in an age of revolution / [electronic resource] : Gita May. - New Haven [Conn.] : Yale University Press, c2005. - 237 p., 16 p. of plates : ill. (some col.).
Includes bibliographical references (p. 205-220) and index.
Early years -- First successes -- Marriage -- Marie-Antoinette's portraitist -- Vigée Le Brun salonnière -- 1789 -- Rome -- Naples, Venice, Milan -- Vienna -- The Russian experience -- Homeward bound -- The English interlude -- Return to imperial France -- An active old age.
The foremost woman artist of her age, Elisabeth Vigée Le Brun (1755-1842) exerted her considerable charm to become the friend, and then official portraitist, of Marie Antoinette. Though profitable, this role made her a public and controversial figure, and in 1789 it precipitated her exile. In a Europe torn by strife and revolution, this singularly gifted and high-spirited woman nevertheless managed to thrive as an independent, self-supporting artist, doggedly setting up studios in Rome, Naples, Venice, Milan, Vienna, St. Petersburg, and London. Long overlooked or dismissed, Vigée Le Brun's portraits now hang in the Louvre, in a room of their own, as well as in all leading art museums of the world. Illustrations include sixteen of her portraits presented in full color.--From publisher description.
Electronic reproduction.
Palo Alto, Calif. :
ebrary,
2013.
Available via World Wide Web.
Access may be limited to ebrary affiliated libraries.
GBA579254 bnb
Uk
Vigée-Lebrun, Louise-Elisabeth, 1755-1842.
Portrait painters--France--Biography.
Electronic books.
ND553.V5325 / M39 2005eb
759.4 B