The concepts of social reproduction and immaterial labour, normally deployed in accounts of art since the 1960s, can and should also be deployed in the examination of earlier periods of art practice. Using census data and other primary sources which document the households of (primarily) London artists in the 1870s and 1880s, the article explores the intimate spatial relationship of art work and family life within these households; the social and entrepreneurial labour which was taken on by the family members or servants of artists; and the distribution of responsibility for routine family and domestic labour in these households. Women’s exclusion from professional art practice appears to be entrenched in the division of household labour, a...
As indicated by the title of this thesis, the two main themes to be discussed are class and gender. ...
In this submission, I argue for a re-thinking of the concept of an artist's oeuvre, to extend it con...
The paper explores how Thorstein Veblen\u27s analysis can help articulate the problem that domestic ...
The concepts of social reproduction and immaterial labour, normally deployed in accounts of art sinc...
This discussion explores the assumption that it is love, rather than material gain, that motivates a...
This article addresses issues of gender inequality in the UK’s contemporary art sector. It combines...
Taking the form of a discussion among an art historian, a curator and an artist, the article explore...
Social-reproduction theory demands that attention be paid to the mostly overlooked and undervalued p...
This article considers how the museum produces knowledge about the past and present of feminist poli...
As a marginalised group in Australian art history and society, women artists possess a valuable and ...
This study is the first to reconstruct and investigate the lives and output of professional women pr...
This thesis deals with the intersection of art and Victorian gender. The first chapter will deal wit...
Nochlin‘s 1971 essay Why Have There Been No Great Women Artists? highlighted the barriers that women...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University Press ...
The lives of three female and one male artist working at the Della Robbia Pottery in Birkenhead are ...
As indicated by the title of this thesis, the two main themes to be discussed are class and gender. ...
In this submission, I argue for a re-thinking of the concept of an artist's oeuvre, to extend it con...
The paper explores how Thorstein Veblen\u27s analysis can help articulate the problem that domestic ...
The concepts of social reproduction and immaterial labour, normally deployed in accounts of art sinc...
This discussion explores the assumption that it is love, rather than material gain, that motivates a...
This article addresses issues of gender inequality in the UK’s contemporary art sector. It combines...
Taking the form of a discussion among an art historian, a curator and an artist, the article explore...
Social-reproduction theory demands that attention be paid to the mostly overlooked and undervalued p...
This article considers how the museum produces knowledge about the past and present of feminist poli...
As a marginalised group in Australian art history and society, women artists possess a valuable and ...
This study is the first to reconstruct and investigate the lives and output of professional women pr...
This thesis deals with the intersection of art and Victorian gender. The first chapter will deal wit...
Nochlin‘s 1971 essay Why Have There Been No Great Women Artists? highlighted the barriers that women...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University Press ...
The lives of three female and one male artist working at the Della Robbia Pottery in Birkenhead are ...
As indicated by the title of this thesis, the two main themes to be discussed are class and gender. ...
In this submission, I argue for a re-thinking of the concept of an artist's oeuvre, to extend it con...
The paper explores how Thorstein Veblen\u27s analysis can help articulate the problem that domestic ...