توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Women Can’t Paint: Gender, the Glass Ceiling and Values in Contemporary Art
نام کتاب : Women Can’t Paint: Gender, the Glass Ceiling and Values in Contemporary Art
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : زنان نمی توانند نقاشی کنند: جنسیت، سقف شیشه ای و ارزش ها در هنر معاصر
سری :
نویسندگان : Helen Gørrill
ناشر : Bloomsbury Visual Arts
سال نشر : 2020
تعداد صفحات : 297
ISBN (شابک) : 9781788310802 , 9781501352768
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 6 مگابایت
بعد از تکمیل فرایند پرداخت لینک دانلود کتاب ارائه خواهد شد. درصورت ثبت نام و ورود به حساب کاربری خود قادر خواهید بود لیست کتاب های خریداری شده را مشاهده فرمایید.
فهرست مطالب :
Title Page\nCopyright Page\nContents\nFigures\nAcknowledgements\nIntroduction: Women can’t paint\n Setting the scene: The trouble with gender\n Counting, after all, is a feminist strategy\n Throwing out the baby with the bathwater\nChapter 1: Masculinities and femininities in painting: The new androgynous aesthetics in contemporary art\n On the masculinities and femininities of paint: ‘IT’S NOT FOR GIRLS!’\n Femininity lives elsewhere\n A discovery of androgynous aesthetics\n A gendered analysis of figuration and abstraction in contemporary painting\n A gendered approach to subject matter in contemporary painting\n A gendered approach to painting mediums in contemporary art\n A gendered approach to picture format in contemporary art\n A gendered approach to painting support in contemporary art\n A gendered approach to the overall average lightness contained within contemporary painting\n A gendered approach to overall average scale of contemporary painting\n A gendered approach to the analysis of the artist’s signature or annotation of an artwork\n fe<>male\n On feminine and masculine aesthetics\n Women cannot paint: They simply don’t pass the market test, the value test80\nChapter 2: The price of being a woman artist: Dollars, dirhams, pounds and euros\n Where are all the women artists?\n Tornados striking the artworld\n An insurmountable obstacle\n WAVE: I can’t see you!\n Gender value gaps in the artworld\n How femininities and masculinities can increase or decrease value in art\n How the use of a signature can devalue a woman’s artwork\n A descending glass ceiling\n The femininity of abstraction in contemporary paintings\nChapter 3: The museum exposed: Gendered visibilities and essentialist aesthetics through equality\n Hiding behind headlines\n The impact of museum inclusion on the economic value of painting\n The gendered visibility of artists in our museum collections\n Segregation versus integration in feminist curatorial practice\n Essentialist aesthetics in equal collections\n The Finnish National Gallery collection: Equality in collections, greater freedom of creativity through aesthetics?\nChapter 4: Gender parity and arts prizes: ‘Only men are capable of aesthetic greatness’\n Patriarchal climates\n The United States\n The UK\n Europe\n The Middle East\n The magnitude of the tornado that represents gender (in)equality in art prizes\n The impact of arts prizes on economic values\n The impact of arts prizes on museum inclusion\n The masculinity of prize success\nChapter 5: The importance of wearing the Right Old (Art) School Tie: Networking, gender and painting values\n Cultural and social capital in contemporary painting\n Gender, cultural/social capital and artist’s inclusion in the Tate collection\n Gender, economic value of paintings and art school location\n Returning to the issue of gender: ‘The pram in the hall’\n A rather bleak outlook\nChapter 6: Sexism and ageism in visual art values: ‘But men are allowed to be old or ugly!’\n Bye Bye Totty, Hello Invisible Woman\n The art is yet young\n Sales have dried up\n Perceived discrimination against women by men\n The new contemporary artworld hysteria\n The artworld Queen Bee\n Fact is stranger than fiction\nChapter 7: Smashing the glass ceiling of women’s art: Manifestos for equality that could actually work\n We had better prepare our great-granddaughters for disappointment\n Manifesto for a gender-equal artworld #1: An education for all through role models\n Manifesto for a gender-equal artworld #2: Museum diversity policies to be fully inclusive and take account of gender\n Manifesto for a gender-equal artworld #3: The introduction of gender quotas or caps\n Manifesto for a gender-equal artworld #4: Media and Museum PR responsibility to gender equality\n Manifesto for a gender-equal artworld #5: Call for artworld regulation\n Manifesto for a gender-equal artworld #6: Feminist (and visual arts) methodologies to embrace a quantitative research\n Manifesto for a gender-equal artworld #7: More funding to investigate and find solutions for art gender inequalities\nConclusion: Baselitz’s folly: Women can paint\nGlossary\nAppendices\nAppendix 1: Contemporary British painters with ‘Top 100’ visibility at the 1992–4 London auctions\nAppendix 2: Contemporary British painters with ‘Top 100’ visibility at the 2012–14 London auctions\nAppendix 3: Contemporary British painters with ‘Top 100’ visibility at the 1992–4 London auctions per cm²\nAppendix 4: Contemporary British painters with ‘Top 100’ visibility at the 2012–14 London auctions per cm²\nAppendix 5: Top 10 performing female artists in the sample: The United States\nAppendix 6: Top 10 performing male artists in the sample: The United States\nAppendix 7: Top 10 performing female artists in the sample: The Middle East\nAppendix 8: Top 10 performing male artists in the sample: The Middle East\nAppendix 9: Top 10 performing female artists in the sample: The UK\nAppendix 10: Top 10 performing male artists in the sample: The UK\nAppendix 11: Top 10 performing female artists in the sample: Europe (other than the UK)\nAppendix 12: Top 10 performing male artists in the sample: Europe (other than the UK)\nAppendix 13: How gender/the brandof femininity impacts upon aestheticvariables and sales\nAppendix 14: How gender/the brandof masculinity impacts upon aestheticvariables and sales\nAppendix 15: Gender equality(age at creation of artwork) in the Finnish National Gallery: A global comparison\nAppendix 16: An assessment of the levels of abstraction or figuration in contemporary paintings at the Finnish National Gallery\nAppendix 17: An assessment of the subject matter in contemporary paintings at the Finnish National Gallery\nAppendix 18: An assessment and global comparison of the average scale of paintings\nAppendix 19: A global assessment of the use of media in contemporary paintings\nAppendix 20: A global assessment of supports in contemporary paintings\nNotes\n Introduction: Women can’t paint\n Chapter 1\n Chapter 2\n Chapter 3\n Chapter 4\n Chapter 5\n Chapter 6\n Chapter 7\n Conclusion: Baselitz’s folly: Women can paint\n Glossary\nReferences\nIndex