International Standard Book Number |
9781639731312 (ebook)
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International Standard Book Number |
9781639731305 (hardcover)
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International Standard Book Number |
163973130X (hardcover)
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Personal Name |
Dasal, Jennifer, 1980- author.
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Title Statement |
The club : where American women artists found refuge in Belle Epoque Paris / Jennifer Dasal.
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Production, Publication, Distribution, Manufacture, and Copyright Notice |
New York : Bloomsbury Publishing, 2025.
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Physical Description |
xvi, 316 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color), map, portraits ; 25 cm.
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Bibliography, Etc. Note |
Includes bibliographical references (pages [251]-301) and index.
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Formatted Contents Note |
The Splendor of Paris -- Trailing Painfully Behind -- A Good Woman or a Great Artist -- Starving Artists and Ugly Americans -- The Minister's Wife -- A Rambling Old Structure -- In the Midst of Luxury and Romance -- Early Reviews -- A Day in Anna Lester's Life -- What Hopes and Fears, and Triumphs -- An Exhibition of Their Own -- A Notre Regrette Camarade -- Why Not Turn Our Art into Food -- The Sculptor of Horrors -- Anne Goldthwaite and the Shock of the New -- Sculpture or Suffrage, or Alice Morgan Goes to Jail -- Extending the Club's Sphere of Usefulness -- A Bolt From the Blue -- Reestablishing Usefulness to American Girls -- Through the Vision and Generosity of Elisabeth Mills Reid -- The Hard Work of Remembering.
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Summary, Etc. |
"In Belle Epoque Paris, the Eiffel Tower was newly built, France was experiencing remarkable political stability, and American women were painting the town and gathering at a female-only Residence known as The American Girls' Club in Paris. Opened in 1893, The Club was the center of expatriate living and of dedication to a calling in the fine arts, and singularly harbored a generation of independent, talented, and driven American women. Now in The Club, curator, art historian, and podcast host Jennifer Dasal presents the never-before-told story of the Club, the philanthropists who created it, and the artists it housed. These women forged connections in the arts and letters with luminaries like Auguste Rodin and Gertrude Stein or became activists through their relationships with the likes of Emmeline Pankhurst. But just as importantly, these women's lives revealed the power of the Club itself, and the way that having a safe home for single women of ambition allowed them to grow as teachers, artists, suffragists, and people"-- Publisher's description.
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Subject-Corporate Name |
American Art Students' Club for Women.
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Subject Added Entry - Topical Term |
Women artists Homes and haunts France Paris.
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Subject Added Entry - Topical Term |
Women artists France Paris Biography.
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Subject Added Entry - Topical Term |
Americans History 19th century. France Paris
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Subject Added Entry - Topical Term |
Americans History 20th century. France Paris
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Subject Added Entry - Topical Term |
Art and society History. 19th century
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Subject Added Entry - Topical Term |
Art and society History. 20th century
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Subject Added Entry - Geographical Term |
Paris (France) Intellectual life 19th century.
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Subject Added Entry - Geographical Term |
Paris (France) Intellectual life 20th century.
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Subject Added Entry - Geographical Term |
Paris (France) Social life and customs 19th century.
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Subject Added Entry - Geographical Term |
Paris (France) Social life and customs 20th century.
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Index Term-Genre/Form |
Biographies.
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Index Term-Genre/Form |
Art.
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