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Hardcover Elisabeth Vigée Le Brun: The Odyssey of an Artist in an Age of Revolution Book

ISBN: 0300108729

ISBN13: 9780300108729

Elisabeth Vigée Le Brun: The Odyssey of an Artist in an Age of Revolution

The story of Marie Antoinette's portraitist, a remarkable woman living in dangerous times

The foremost woman artist of her age, Elisabeth Vig e Le Brun (1755--1842) exerted her considerable charm to become the friend, and then official portraitist, of Marie Antoinette. Though profitable, this role made Vig e Le Brun a public and controversial figure, and in 1789 it precipitated her exile. In a Europe torn by strife and revolution,...

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Customer Reviews

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3.5 Stars for this PEOPLE Magazine like biography

Elizabeth Vigee Lebrun was a fascinating woman and a prolific artist. She lived a rather dramatic, rather epic life. It strikes me as a tremendous shame that this slender book is one of the only biographies of the artist written in English, for it failed to do much more than skim the surface. I felt the same way I do after reading a People magazine - entertained but hardly edified. The author reused several phrases throughout the book and retold the same information but in different ways. How many times does the reader need to be told that Vigree Lebrun maintained an ardent loyalty to Marie Antoinette? Why keep telling us? Why not show us? This felt like the bare bones, the skeleton of a rather well-endowed woman. Her life was so colorful, so fleshed out, but not in this biography. We were told Vigee Lebrun lived through the Revolution and the Restoratin, but we were not shown the impact of those events. Unfortunately, despite the author's impressive command of 18th century history, this book fell flat.

Elisabeth Vigee Le Brun: The Odyssey of an Artist in an Age of Revolution by

Elizaeth Vigee Lebrun Over Came Many Obstacles In Her Life.For A Woman Living In Those Days Vigee Lebrun Was A Very Strong And Humble Woman. She Enjoyed Her Work As An Artist.She Was Well Loved By Many Close Friends And Admirers.This Book Was A Joy To Read.It Would Have Been Nice If All Her Paintings Were Included In The Book.

An excellent introduction to this distinguished painter.

I agree with some of the criticisms of previous reviewers; still this was an excellent overview of Vigee Le Brun's life. I enjoyed reading about her differences with David, and was especially intrigued by her decade long stay in Russia. I do wish that May would have fleshed some of her story out more in some instances. For example, when she says on page 41 that the Dauphin died under mysterious circumstances, this is much less a mystery. He was terribly abused, and mention of this would have made our understanding of the famous painting that much more tragic. I also would have liked to have a better understanding of how she ran a salon and painted portraits at the same time. On the other hand, May includes many interesting details about her escape into Italy, penniless with a young daughter in tow. I also enjoyed reading about her amusing effort to paint Germaine de Stael in an attractive manner.

Breaking the canvas ceiling

One of the nice things about being interested in art and history, is that you find out the most amazing things -- if I had read this as the plot of a novel, I would have harrumphed and muttered Balderdash! But once I started reading this slim biography, I was hooked about this story of a woman who not just held her own in the French court before the Revolution and Terror, but managed to survive and thrive in a world where women were certainly a second class. Author Gita May takes on the intriguing and adventuresome story of Elisabeth Vigee Le Brun and fleshes it out into a portrait of a woman that took on the establishment, and yet was very much a traditionalist. Born into an artistic family, Elisabeth Vigee showed a precoious talent for drawing and portraits, something that delighted her father, an artist of middling stature who encouraged his daughter's education in art. Her mother, however, was disappointed in Elisabeth, and clearly favoured her son instead. While most young women of her class were busy planning for marriage, Elisabeth poured her passions and desires into art, and while she could not attend the formal sessions that the professional artists gave, she was still able to get private lessons. Still it was expected that she would marry, and Elisabeth Vigee soon married an art dealer, Le Brun, in what everyone thought would be a suitable match. Her earliest portraits were of her own family and friends, and soon she was building a clientele of minor nobility. While today, portrait art is respectable, in the eighteenth century, portrait work wasn't held in that high of a regard, being not as worthy as say, history or landscape painting. But there was certainly a market for portraits, and Vigee Le Brun soon found that her talent was appealing to buyers. Soon she was having commissions to fill, and painting some of the more famous in the land -- a talent that soon had her walking in the halls of Versailles. Her ability to capture liveliness and expression in her sitter was just the sort of thing to appeal to the circle of courtiers that surrounded Marie Antoinette. Soon Elisabeth was named official portraitist to the Queen, and she was spending her days working in her studio, and at night she had established a salon, where the titled and those of leisure could gather for intellectual conversation. All appeared well until Paris erupted in revolution, and the King and Queen of France were forced to live in Paris. And now, is where the story gets interesting. Elisabeth watched her earnings and savings dry up. Her nerves were frayed, and she feared for the lives of herself and her daughter, Julie, for she had never been shy about admitting her ferverent royalist leanings. Before she could be arrested, she and Julie fled Paris, and France. Officially, she was going to Italy to 'study art,' but the reality was that she was an exile. To make matters worse, her husband had frittered away her earnings on other women and gambling. Could she

An interesting book, a nightmarish editing job

I must point out that I am reading this because I don't know that much about the subject; I can't really speak to its accuracy. I have always been charmed by Vigee Le Brun's work, and this is a relatively brief (237 pp.), but insightful and informative account of her life. Since Vigee Le Brun's memoirs ran to three volumes, I assume that this could have been much longer, but I thought it was a satisfying length, giving me the feeling of having a good sense of the person without being overwhelmed by detail, cant and speculation. There are a couple of other monographs, noted below, if the reader wants more detailed information. May is quite aware that Vigee Le Brun, who became official painter to Queen Marie-Antoinette, might be considered politically incorrect, being rather conservative, lacking social awareness for the plight of the poor, and a Royalist with regard to the French revolution. I thought she handled this well, signalling her understanding that this might distress some readers and critics, while accepting her subject as she was. Unlike some writers, she keeps artistic talent, personal qualities and political thinking separate, without neglecting any of the three. The book is gorgeously illustrated. There are sixteen color plates, plus a number of black and white reproductions scattered throughout the text. Of course, there are never enough illustrations. In reading about artists, I would like to see examples of the work of close associates, in this case Vigee Le Brun's father and mentors. Of course, I want this without having to give up any reproductions of the main subject's work. One can dream. I was originally going to give this fewer stars because of the problems listed below. However, outside of being bewildered at a few points, I really enjoyed the book and I'm glad that I read it. I leave the reader to decide how much bad editing bothers them. I urge the Yale University Press to correct any other editions. I believe that this is the most badly edited book I have ever read. Among less serious flaws, an allegorical painting entitled 'Peace Bring Back Abundance' is described as, "the figure of peace gently guiding and protecting peace." I believe that should be "protecting abundance." Further, it is frequently repetitive; e.g., the sad end to the life of Lady Hamilton is described twice (pp. 97 and 173.) More seriously, it is sometimes repetitive and self-contradictory. Plate 2 is a reproduction of a Vigee Le Brun portrait of a man in a yellow vest, identified as Hubert Robert. On page 16, this painting is described in detail and identified as "Joseph Vernet ... (plate 3)" and on p. 62, described again and identified as Robert. This is particularly pathetic for a university press. The notes are nicely done and, one of my pet causes, the running titles is used to identify the sections of notes, making them easier to match up. There are some explanatory notes included with the bibilographic infor
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