Christie’s no.211: All about female artists

Discussion in 'Art' started by springfld.arsenal, Mar 7, 2020.

  1. springfld.arsenal

    springfld.arsenal Store: http://www.springfieldarsenal.net/

    [​IMG]


    [​IMG]

    The Dinner Party — a fictional gathering of 10 women artists who changed history

    [​IMG]

    The women who inspired us — Christie’s specialists pay tribute to their guiding lights

    [​IMG]

    How Charlotte Perriand broke down borders, barriers and conventions with her designs

    [​IMG]

    Luxembourg & Dayan: ‘It’s the best time to be a woman in the art world, but it’s still hard’

    [​IMG]

    Why this museum director wants collectors ‘to donate works by women and people of colour’

    [​IMG]

    Rule-breakers, game-changers, tastemakers: a curated edit of stories celebrating women in art


    More stories

    Editor’s picks



    [​IMG]

    Florence Ada Fuller (1867-1946) was born in South Africa and went on to live in Australia, England and India. It’s thought she painted The Road to Simonstown from Muizenbergbetween 1892 and 1894, while convalescing after a long illness. In the foreground is the cottage of Cecil Rhodes, then Prime Minister of the Cape Colony

    Estimate: £8,000-10,000
    12-19 March, Online





    [​IMG]

    When The New York Public Library held an exhibition of Mary Cassatt’s prints in 2013, it described her approach to printmaking as ‘audacious’. Feeding the Ducks, circa 1895, typifies her interest in women and children as subjects. It’s thought that only 13 impressions of this print exist

    Estimate: £15,000-£20,000
    18 March, London





    [​IMG]

    The Indian Modernist Nasreen Mohamedi (1937-1990) has been the subject of solo retrospectives at Tate Liverpool and The Met. In her diaries she wrote of her struggle to realise ‘the maximum of the minimum’. Untitled, a work in pencil, watercolour and collage on paper, dates from the late 1960s

    Estimate: $10,000-15,000
    18 March, New York





    [​IMG]

    This ‘Fungo’ lamp was designed by Gabriella Crespi circa 1973. The Milanese designer moved to Rome in the 1960s, where she was feted by the likes of Audrey Hepburn, Hubert de Givenchy and Gianni Versace. In 1987, however, she abandoned her exotic social life to spend two decades living in the Himalayas

    Estimate: £2,000-4,000
    19 March, London





    [​IMG]

    Antonietta Brandeis (1848-1926) studied in Prague before moving to Venice and Florence. She is celebrated for her luminous architectural scenes of Italian cities, which included Verona, Rome and Turin. This small oil painting is titled A Street Scene with Children Under an Archway

    Estimate: £3,000-5,000
    19 March, London



    More trending lots

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]


    Also on Christies.com



    A tribute to Akbar Padamsee, one of the great figures of Indian post-war art — featuring works offered in New York



    From Louis XIV to Louis XVI, Régence to Empire — everything you need to know about buying French clocks
     
Draft saved Draft deleted
Similar Threads: Christie’s no211
Forum Title Date
Art Christie’s 4/27/24 Apr 27, 2024
Art Christie’s 4/13/24 Apr 13, 2024
Art Christie’s 4/6/24 Apr 6, 2024
Art Christie’s 3/30/24 Mar 31, 2024
Art Christie’s 3/23/26 Mar 23, 2024

Share This Page