Women, Collecting, and Cultures Beyond Europe
portes grátis
Women, Collecting, and Cultures Beyond Europe
Leis, Arlene
Taylor & Francis Ltd
11/2022
258
Dura
Inglês
9781032135465
15 a 20 dias
Descrição não disponível.
Collecting to Collectingism: New Directions in Women's Transcultural Practices
Arlene Leis
Part 1: Points of Transcultural Exchange
1. Europeenerie in Feminine Space: Qing Imperial Women and Collecting in China's Long Eighteenth Century
Chih-En Chen
2. Coerced Contact: The Dzungar Court Costume of a Swedish Knitting Instructor
Lisa Hellman
3. Trading Places: The Japanese Art Collection of O'Tama Kiyohara Ragusa
Maria Antonietta Spadaro
4. Created to Gleam: Decorum, Taste and Luxury of Four Dresses from Viceregal Mexico
Martha Sandoval-Villegas and Laura Garcia-Vedrenne
Part 2: Natural History, Colonial Encounters, and Indigenous Histories
5. The Botanist Was a Woman: Classifying and Collecting on the First French Circumnavigation of the Globe
Glynis Ridley
6. Pineapple Lady: Expertise and Exoticism in Agnes Block's Self-Representation as Flora Batava
Catherine Powell-Warren
7. A Memsahib's 'Natural World': Lady Mary Impey's Collection of Indian Natural History Paintings
Apurba Chatterjee
8. Women and Huipils: The Treasuring of an Indigenous Garment in New Spain
Martha Sandoval-Villegas
9. Colonial Pantomime: Queen Marie I of Portugal's Human Cabinet of Curiosities
Agnieszka Anna Ficek
Part 3: Settlers, Immigrants and New Frontiers
10. Settler Botanists, Nature's Gentlemen, and the Canadian Book of Nature: Catharine Parr Traill's Canadian Wild Flowers
Cynthia Sugars
11. Collecting Indian Art in Santa Fe: The Bryn Mawrters and the Politics of Preservation
Nancy Owen Lewis
12. The Spectacle of Sponsoring an Ottoman Trousseau
Gwendolyn Collaco
13. Las Bexarenas and their Wills: Women's Material Culture and Cataloguing Practices in Spanish San Fernando de Bexar
Amy M. Porter
Part 4: Recovery, Collaboration, and Repatriation
14. 'He Surely Existed': Women of the Early Folk Art Collecting Movement and Thomas W. Commeraw, Forgotten African-American Potter
Brandt Zipp
15. Adjacency in the Collection
Toby Upson
16. Collecting Fibre Arts in Arnhem Land
Louise Hamby
17. From Women's Hands: Learning from Metis Women's Collections
Angela Fey and Maureen Matthews
Arlene Leis
Part 1: Points of Transcultural Exchange
1. Europeenerie in Feminine Space: Qing Imperial Women and Collecting in China's Long Eighteenth Century
Chih-En Chen
2. Coerced Contact: The Dzungar Court Costume of a Swedish Knitting Instructor
Lisa Hellman
3. Trading Places: The Japanese Art Collection of O'Tama Kiyohara Ragusa
Maria Antonietta Spadaro
4. Created to Gleam: Decorum, Taste and Luxury of Four Dresses from Viceregal Mexico
Martha Sandoval-Villegas and Laura Garcia-Vedrenne
Part 2: Natural History, Colonial Encounters, and Indigenous Histories
5. The Botanist Was a Woman: Classifying and Collecting on the First French Circumnavigation of the Globe
Glynis Ridley
6. Pineapple Lady: Expertise and Exoticism in Agnes Block's Self-Representation as Flora Batava
Catherine Powell-Warren
7. A Memsahib's 'Natural World': Lady Mary Impey's Collection of Indian Natural History Paintings
Apurba Chatterjee
8. Women and Huipils: The Treasuring of an Indigenous Garment in New Spain
Martha Sandoval-Villegas
9. Colonial Pantomime: Queen Marie I of Portugal's Human Cabinet of Curiosities
Agnieszka Anna Ficek
Part 3: Settlers, Immigrants and New Frontiers
10. Settler Botanists, Nature's Gentlemen, and the Canadian Book of Nature: Catharine Parr Traill's Canadian Wild Flowers
Cynthia Sugars
11. Collecting Indian Art in Santa Fe: The Bryn Mawrters and the Politics of Preservation
Nancy Owen Lewis
12. The Spectacle of Sponsoring an Ottoman Trousseau
Gwendolyn Collaco
13. Las Bexarenas and their Wills: Women's Material Culture and Cataloguing Practices in Spanish San Fernando de Bexar
Amy M. Porter
Part 4: Recovery, Collaboration, and Repatriation
14. 'He Surely Existed': Women of the Early Folk Art Collecting Movement and Thomas W. Commeraw, Forgotten African-American Potter
Brandt Zipp
15. Adjacency in the Collection
Toby Upson
16. Collecting Fibre Arts in Arnhem Land
Louise Hamby
17. From Women's Hands: Learning from Metis Women's Collections
Angela Fey and Maureen Matthews
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
womens studies;gender studies;collection;global;taxonomy;artificiallia;naturallia;display;United States;Central America;Canada;South America;Japan;China;India;Middle East;Australia;colonial;decolonial;indigenous;slavery;racism;Queen Marie I;Lady Mary Impey;Catharine Parr Traill;Beatrice Judd Ryan;Lady Jane Franklin;Agnes Block;objects;O'Tama Kiyohara Ragusa;Indian Flora;Referent Models;Oil On Canvas;Clementine;Confers;Evergreen;Snuff;Persona;Follow;Baroque;Women's Collections;Qing Imperial;Japanese Art Objects;Indian Artists;Manitoba Museum;Qing Imperial Court;Porcelain Fired;Natural History Illustrations;Young Man;Cheng Gong;Qianlong Reign;Forbidden City;Dragon's Blood;High Qing;Dogs Tooth Violet
Collecting to Collectingism: New Directions in Women's Transcultural Practices
Arlene Leis
Part 1: Points of Transcultural Exchange
1. Europeenerie in Feminine Space: Qing Imperial Women and Collecting in China's Long Eighteenth Century
Chih-En Chen
2. Coerced Contact: The Dzungar Court Costume of a Swedish Knitting Instructor
Lisa Hellman
3. Trading Places: The Japanese Art Collection of O'Tama Kiyohara Ragusa
Maria Antonietta Spadaro
4. Created to Gleam: Decorum, Taste and Luxury of Four Dresses from Viceregal Mexico
Martha Sandoval-Villegas and Laura Garcia-Vedrenne
Part 2: Natural History, Colonial Encounters, and Indigenous Histories
5. The Botanist Was a Woman: Classifying and Collecting on the First French Circumnavigation of the Globe
Glynis Ridley
6. Pineapple Lady: Expertise and Exoticism in Agnes Block's Self-Representation as Flora Batava
Catherine Powell-Warren
7. A Memsahib's 'Natural World': Lady Mary Impey's Collection of Indian Natural History Paintings
Apurba Chatterjee
8. Women and Huipils: The Treasuring of an Indigenous Garment in New Spain
Martha Sandoval-Villegas
9. Colonial Pantomime: Queen Marie I of Portugal's Human Cabinet of Curiosities
Agnieszka Anna Ficek
Part 3: Settlers, Immigrants and New Frontiers
10. Settler Botanists, Nature's Gentlemen, and the Canadian Book of Nature: Catharine Parr Traill's Canadian Wild Flowers
Cynthia Sugars
11. Collecting Indian Art in Santa Fe: The Bryn Mawrters and the Politics of Preservation
Nancy Owen Lewis
12. The Spectacle of Sponsoring an Ottoman Trousseau
Gwendolyn Collaco
13. Las Bexarenas and their Wills: Women's Material Culture and Cataloguing Practices in Spanish San Fernando de Bexar
Amy M. Porter
Part 4: Recovery, Collaboration, and Repatriation
14. 'He Surely Existed': Women of the Early Folk Art Collecting Movement and Thomas W. Commeraw, Forgotten African-American Potter
Brandt Zipp
15. Adjacency in the Collection
Toby Upson
16. Collecting Fibre Arts in Arnhem Land
Louise Hamby
17. From Women's Hands: Learning from Metis Women's Collections
Angela Fey and Maureen Matthews
Arlene Leis
Part 1: Points of Transcultural Exchange
1. Europeenerie in Feminine Space: Qing Imperial Women and Collecting in China's Long Eighteenth Century
Chih-En Chen
2. Coerced Contact: The Dzungar Court Costume of a Swedish Knitting Instructor
Lisa Hellman
3. Trading Places: The Japanese Art Collection of O'Tama Kiyohara Ragusa
Maria Antonietta Spadaro
4. Created to Gleam: Decorum, Taste and Luxury of Four Dresses from Viceregal Mexico
Martha Sandoval-Villegas and Laura Garcia-Vedrenne
Part 2: Natural History, Colonial Encounters, and Indigenous Histories
5. The Botanist Was a Woman: Classifying and Collecting on the First French Circumnavigation of the Globe
Glynis Ridley
6. Pineapple Lady: Expertise and Exoticism in Agnes Block's Self-Representation as Flora Batava
Catherine Powell-Warren
7. A Memsahib's 'Natural World': Lady Mary Impey's Collection of Indian Natural History Paintings
Apurba Chatterjee
8. Women and Huipils: The Treasuring of an Indigenous Garment in New Spain
Martha Sandoval-Villegas
9. Colonial Pantomime: Queen Marie I of Portugal's Human Cabinet of Curiosities
Agnieszka Anna Ficek
Part 3: Settlers, Immigrants and New Frontiers
10. Settler Botanists, Nature's Gentlemen, and the Canadian Book of Nature: Catharine Parr Traill's Canadian Wild Flowers
Cynthia Sugars
11. Collecting Indian Art in Santa Fe: The Bryn Mawrters and the Politics of Preservation
Nancy Owen Lewis
12. The Spectacle of Sponsoring an Ottoman Trousseau
Gwendolyn Collaco
13. Las Bexarenas and their Wills: Women's Material Culture and Cataloguing Practices in Spanish San Fernando de Bexar
Amy M. Porter
Part 4: Recovery, Collaboration, and Repatriation
14. 'He Surely Existed': Women of the Early Folk Art Collecting Movement and Thomas W. Commeraw, Forgotten African-American Potter
Brandt Zipp
15. Adjacency in the Collection
Toby Upson
16. Collecting Fibre Arts in Arnhem Land
Louise Hamby
17. From Women's Hands: Learning from Metis Women's Collections
Angela Fey and Maureen Matthews
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
womens studies;gender studies;collection;global;taxonomy;artificiallia;naturallia;display;United States;Central America;Canada;South America;Japan;China;India;Middle East;Australia;colonial;decolonial;indigenous;slavery;racism;Queen Marie I;Lady Mary Impey;Catharine Parr Traill;Beatrice Judd Ryan;Lady Jane Franklin;Agnes Block;objects;O'Tama Kiyohara Ragusa;Indian Flora;Referent Models;Oil On Canvas;Clementine;Confers;Evergreen;Snuff;Persona;Follow;Baroque;Women's Collections;Qing Imperial;Japanese Art Objects;Indian Artists;Manitoba Museum;Qing Imperial Court;Porcelain Fired;Natural History Illustrations;Young Man;Cheng Gong;Qianlong Reign;Forbidden City;Dragon's Blood;High Qing;Dogs Tooth Violet