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Book Cover
E-book
Author Huneault, Kristina, author

Title I'm not myself at all : women, art, and subjectivity in Canada / Kristina Huneault
Published Montreal : McGill-Queen's University Press, [2018]

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Description 1 online resource
Series McGill-Queen's/Beaverbrook Canadian Foundation studies in art history
McGill-Queen's/Beaverbrook Canadian Foundation studies in art history.
Contents Cover; I'm Not Myself at All; Title; Copyright; Dedication; Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction; PART ONE · IDENTITIES; 1 Absence Henrietta Hamilton, Demasduit, and the Settler-Colonial Encounter; 2 Displacements Self and Home in the Art of Frances Anne Hopkins; 3 Gaps Lived Experience and Cultural Narrative in Helen McNicoll's Impressionist Canvases; PART TWO · FORCES; 4 Diversity Identity, Difference, and the Botanical Encounter; 5 Inclination Maternity, Reverie, and the Art of Being-With; 6 Listening Nature and Personhood for Emily Carr and Sewiṉchelwet (Sophie Frank); Coda
Summary "Notions of identity have long structured women's art. Dynamics of race, class, and gender have shaped the production of artworks and oriented their subsequent reassessments. Arguably, this is especially true of art by women, and of the socially engaged criticism that addresses it. If identity has been a problem in women's art, however, is more identity the solution? In this collection of interpretive essays on nineteenth and early twentieth-century art in Canada, author Kristina Huneault offers a meditation on the strictures of identity, and an exploration of forces that unsettle and realign the self. Looking closely at individual artists and works, Huneault combines formal analysis with archival research and philosophical inquiry, building nuanced readings of objects that range from the canonical to the largely unknown. Whether in miniature portraits or genre paintings, botanical drawings or baskets, women artists reckoned with constraints that limited understandings of themselves and others. They also forged creative alternatives. At times, the author explains, identity features in women's artistic work as a failed project, at other times it marks a boundary, beyond which they were able to expand, explore, and exult. Bringing together settler and Indigenous forms of cultural expression and foregrounding the importance of colonialism within the development of art in Canada, I'm not myself at all observes and reactivates historical art by women and prompts readers to consider what a less-restrictive conceptualization of selfhood might bring to current patterns of cultural analysis."-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Subject Women artists -- Canada.
Art -- Canada -- History
Art, Canadian -- 19th century
Art, Canadian -- 20th century
Identity (Psychology) in art.
Women in art.
ART -- Subjects & Themes -- General.
Art
Art, Canadian
Identity (Psychology) in art
Women artists
Women in art
Frau
Frau Motiv
Kunst
Künstlerin
Identität
Canada
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780773554030
0773554033