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Lesbian Art : An Encounter With Power (Art & Australia Book)

Lesbian Art: An Encounter With Power by Elizabeth Ashburn

 

 

 

Lesbian Artists

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Texts:  Lesbian Art
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Lesbian Art in America : A Contemporary History
The Red Rose Girls : An Uncommon Story of Art and LoveThe Red Rose Girls : An Uncommon Story of Art and Love by Alice A. Carter

Alice Carter's The Red Rose Girls traces the lives of three talented artists: Jessie Willcox Smith, Elizabeth Shippen Green, and Violet Oakley. After studying together under the sympathetic guidance of Howard Pyle in Philadelphia, the three (all youngest siblings) decided that they could work best away from the distractions of the city. In 1900, they established their home and studios in a rambling country house called the Red Rose Inn, leading Pyle to dub them the "Red Rose Girls." Strengthened by the emotional support and artistic inspiration that each gave the others, their careers blossomed. Green was a successful illustrator, especially for Harper's Magazine; Smith produced charming portraits of children; and Oakley was famous for huge murals commissioned to decorate state buildings. With their friend Henrietta Cozens acting as "housewife," their unconventional living arrangement attracted much interest, not all of it positive. Carter, a professor at San Jose State University, claims that it freed them from the domestic responsibilities and isolation that could cripple an artist, especially a female artist in pre-emancipated society. For eight years the four led an almost idyllic existence of genteel lifestyle and artistic productivity, but eventually the group disintegrated, with Green's marriage causing an especially painful break. Carter's sympathetic, easy prose perfectly complements the women's idealized art and their uncomplicated belief in the goodness of life. Combining delightful photographs of their domestic lives with examples of their work, The Red Rose Girls re-creates a vanished world of optimism and grace. --John Stevenson

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Dawn Brayford -- Lesbian ArtDawn Brayford - Lesbian Art

Painting, Lesbian Art.

Dawn Brayford is a Lesbian artist who graduated from Liverpool Polytechnic in 1990, now known as Liverpool John Moores University.  Dawn continues to live and work in Liverpool.  

Examples of Brayford's work, including paintings, sketches and watercolors can be seen online at her award winning website.  Click HERE. 

   

June L. Mazer Lesbian Collection

Imagine yourself in a room surrounded by almost a century of lesbian artwork, manuscripts, books, records, newspapers, magazines, photographs, games, organizational papers, tapes, letters, scrapbooks, clothing, and flyers; sharing with other lesbians the excitement of rediscovering the lives and struggles of the women who have come before us; perhaps even catching glimpses of pieces of your own past. You have just imagined yourself at the June L. Mazer Lesbian Archives.

 

Ama MenecAma Menec

The Arts, Lesbians, Ceramics

Ama Menec is a British lesbian Sculptor, celebrating the beauty and grace of fat women in her lifesize works. Unique work seldom seen outside of India.

"My aim in producing the work I do is to celebrate the beauty of fat women, demonstrating that we can be active, dynamic, joyful, sexy, and energetic. I take inspiration from observing my friends, women out shopping, belly dancers, women at discos and the swimming pool, and from my own body. I hope my sculptures will delight the eye while at the same time infusing the mind of the viewer with the luscious potential in fat women." -- Ama Menec

  

Wild Hearts Ranch -- Retreat for Women Artists

Wild Hearts Ranch is continuing the legacy of Elsa Gidlow's Druid Heights Artists Retreat. This property is located  three miles outside of Taos, New Mexico on the Rio de Pueblo. The Rio de Pueblo is a small river full of trout and runs from the Sacred Blue Lake of the Taos Indians thru the Taos Pueblo and continues until it joins the Rio Grande about six miles from the Wild Hearts Ranch. In 1993, Marcelina Martin and Oralani Fuller bought a hundred year old farm that two sisters, Lizzie and Jennie Anderson, had run at the turn of the century as a mill and egg ranch. Marcelina's dream had been to create a retreat to continue where Druid Heights Artists Retreat had ended. Wild Hearts is the flowering of that seed. Oralani is now hosting retreats for women artists and their muses. 

  

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