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Forever Seeing New Beauties
The Forgotten Impressionist Mary Rogers Williams, 1857−1907
The Driftless Connecticut Series & Garnet Books
Sales Date: 2019-11-05
The story of New England's own Mary Cassatt
Revolutionary artist Mary Rogers Williams (1857—1907), a baker's daughter from Hartford, Connecticut, biked and hiked from the Arctic Circle to Naples, exhibited from Paris to Indianapolis, trained at the Art Students League, chafed against art world rules that favored men, wrote thousands of pages about her travels and work, taught at Smith College for nearly two decades, but sadly ended up almost totally obscure. The book reproduces her unpublished artworks that capture pensive gowned women, Norwegian slopes reflected in icy waters, saw-tooth rooflines on French chateaus, and incense hazes in Italian chapels, and it offers a vivid portrayal of an adventurer, defying her era's expectations.
Preface • Notes on Methodology • Chapter 1: Why She Matters • Chapter 2: A Cosmopolitan Emerges • Chapter 3: No Salvation but by Hard Work • Chapter 4: Conveying the Rudiments of Art • Chapter 5: Her Boss's Jealous Mistress • Chapter 6: A Rare Dear Overseas • Chapter 7: Wholly in Pale Tints • Chapter 8: He Certainly Is Unregenerate • Chapter 9: Strange and Beautiful Things • Chapter 10: Misfit in this Workaday World • Chapter 11: A Pastel Every Five Minutes • Chapter 12: To Exhibit in the Provincial Towns • Chapter 13: My Own Femme de Ménage • Chapter 14: The Most Magic House in the World • Chapter 15: Crisp and Free in Treatment • Chapter 16: A Serene and Confident Air • Chapter 17: I'd Like to Run Away • Chapter 18: Old Friends and Some New Ones • Chapter 19: I Feel Like Thirty Cents • Chapter 20: Light So Exquisite • Chapter 21: Nervous Energy Spent Teaching • Chapter 22: Out of the Harness • Chapter 23: Pangs of Loneliness • Chapter 24: A Peaceful Comfortable Feeling • Chapter 25: Wild to Go Out on a Comet Hunt • Chapter 26: How Hard It Is for My Sisters • Chapter 27: Exquisite and Unerring Artistic Taste • Chapter 28: Logical Custodians in Chaotic Days • Chapter 29: The Resurrectionists • Appendix • Acknowledgments • Notes • IndexPreface • Notes on Methodology • Chapter 1: Why She Matters • Chapter 2: A Cosmopolitan Emerges • Chapter 3: No Salvation but by Hard Work • Chapter 4: Conveying the Rudiments of Art • Chapter 5: Her Boss's Jealous Mistress • Chapter 6: A Rare Dear Overseas • Chapter 7: Wholly in Pale Tints • Chapter 8: He Certainly Is Unregenerate • Chapter 9: Strange and Beautiful Things • Chapter 10: Misfit in this Workaday World • Chapter 11: A Pastel Every Five Minutes • Chapter 12: To Exhibit in the Provincial Towns • Chapter 13: My Own Femme de Ménage • Chapter 14: The Most Magic House in the World • Chapter 15: Crisp and Free in Treatment • Chapter 16: A Serene and Confident Air • Chapter 17: I'd Like to Run Away • Chapter 18: Old Friends and Some New Ones • Chapter 19: I Feel Like Thirty Cents • Chapter 20: Light So Exquisite • Chapter 21: Nervous Energy Spent Teaching • Chapter 22: Out of the Harness • Chapter 23: Pangs of Loneliness • Chapter 24: A Peaceful Comfortable Feeling • Chapter 25: Wild to Go Out on a Comet Hunt • Chapter 26: How Hard It Is for My Sisters • Chapter 27: Exquisite and Unerring Artistic Taste • Chapter 28: Logical Custodians in Chaotic Days • Chapter 29: The Resurrectionists • Appendix • Acknowledgments • Notes • Index
EVE M. KAHN is an independent scholar specializing in art and architectural history, design and preservation, and was weekly Antiques columnist at The New York Times, 2008—2016. She contributes regularly to the Times, The Magazine Antiques, Apollo, and Atlas Obscura.
"Eve Kahn evocatively reconstructs Impressionist painter Mary Rogers Williams' life in a jaunty style fitting her upbeat, globe-trekking, paintbrush-wielding subject. A rare woman's perspective on 19th century cosmopolitan life, it's a must-read."
~Katherine Manthorne, art historian, CUNY Graduate Center
"From a forgotten box of letters Eve Kahn meticulously stiches together the life, travels, work, opinions, humor and travails of Mary Rogers Williams. Kahn's zealous detective work begs the question, how many other women, erased to history, await discovery?"
~Marcia Ely, Executive Vice President, Brooklyn Historical Society
"Two decades before Virginia Woolf's "A Room of One's Own," Mary Rogers Williams wrestled with the indignities of life as a professional woman artist. Subject to the sexism of her age, she nonetheless honed an original approach to her art, building a life around her passion for travel, friends, her sisters, and her refusal to forfeit her independent views. Eve Kahn immerses us in Williams's pictures and thoughts, at long last bringing this vivid woman the attention she deserves."
~Amy Kurtz Lansing, Curator, Florence Griswold Museum
"Eve Kahn has created a vivid portrait of an artist who was too self-effacing to paint one of herself. Grounded in New England pastoralism, European decadence, art salon politicking and misogynistic backstabbing, the story of Mary Rogers Williams is one of significant toughness."
~Julie Lasky, journalist, author, and critic
"When historian and journalist Eve Kahn encountered a trove of letters from artist Mary Rogers Williams in 2012, there were scarce references to the late painter online, and her work had barely been exhibited over the past decades. Yet in those letters was a rich insight into the life of an artist who dedicated herself to capturing the world she witnessed, from her home in New England to vistas from her extensive European travels, in a distinctive Impressionist style."
~Allison C. Miller, Art & Object
"We're more attuned than ever to the phenomenon of overlooked women artists: Each new discovery reveals the extent to which our contemporary understanding of art history has been shaped by the indispensable innovation and talent of women who were not often welcomed or properly credited by the overwhelmingly male establishment. Perhaps that's why American Impressionist Mary Rogers Williams (1857–1907), a 'revolutionary artist,' in the words of her biographer Eve Kahn, did her best to sidestep it. It's also why so few have ever heard of the artist, who was, in many ways, more than a century ahead of her time. The rediscovery of an artist like Williams goes to show the impact of a centuries-old system that has deemphasized female artists, but which has begun to shift for the better in recent decades. 'Lots of forgotten women of her time showed prolifically,' says Kahn. 'And if I went through the catalogs of the shows that Mary was in, I could point out 10 women whose stories haven't been told. But nobody's work is quite as avant-garde as Mary's was.'"
~Jenna Adrian-Diaz, Vogue