Rating: Summary: The Red Rose Girls Review: My partner and I are thrilled with this excellent book on these major players in the history of American art and culture. It is an extremely valuable book that brings their remarkable lives to public attention after too many years of neglect. We feel Alice Carter finally does justice to their true story of love and success. These women provided the foundation for so many others in the 20th century and this book finally gives them the recognition they deserve. We love the way the book covers their dramatic struggles to be successful and to have a loving, fulfilling, relationship. The reproductions of their work are some of the best we've seen and there are many images that we've never seen anywhere previously. Only one of us is an artist but we both think that the book will be enjoyed by anyone. It is thoughtfully written and a sensational page turner that we rate at 5 stars.
Rating: Summary: Great book about artists and friendship... Review: Some great reproductions here too, of some Pre-Raphaelite-style art from the Philadelphia area about 100 years ago. Violet spent over 25 years painting huge celebrations of the founding of Pennsylvania in the Harrirburg State Capitol. She may not ne Michaelangelo, but is not far behind his Sistine Chapel! This small coffee table book will never go out of style, and does a great job bringing back 3 great lady artists!
Rating: Summary: Red Rose Girls Review: The Red Rose Girls is a remarkable book. Alice Carter does a superb job of documenting the lives and careers of Violet Oakley, Jessie Wilcox Smith, and Elizabeth Shippen Green. When the last page was turned I not only had a deep respect for their professional accomplishments but I felt that I had known each of these women personally.The strength and success of these women artists is an inspiration to everyone regardless of their sex or chosen occupation. The "Red Rose Girls" is a must have for any library. The quality of writing and research in this book makes it hard to put down and I am looking forward to seeing more publications by this author.
Rating: Summary: great story, too much speculation Review: The story of these illustrators is wonderful; 3 women who had the talent and tenacity to find a way to become successful professional artists, independent of men at a time when that was near impossible. I love this book for its collection of photographs of the women, their home life, and their art, arranged chronologically, so that it becomes apparent how much they affected and influenced each others work. My complaint is that the writing is completely preoccupied with the question of the women's physical sexuality. Ms Carter more than implies a kind of polygamous group intimacy and belabors her point by projecting her assumptions into the photographs and writings over and over. And yet there is no basis for this theory, except Ms Carters own idea that no person can possibly have an asexual lifestyle, and because they weren't married, they must have been sexual with each other. It is entirely possible that some, or even all of the women were sexually involved, but I find that unanswerable question so much less important than the facts of how they were able to avoid falling into social conventions by banding together financially and emotionally as an artistic cooperative, and a family. I wish Ms Carter had spent less time speculating and more time discussing things like what mediums the women were working in, which, oddly, I still don't know after reading the whole 216 pages of this preoccupied and strangely organized book. I am glad to own it for the collection of photos and art work, and for that I give it 3 stars.
Rating: Summary: Tree-mendous! Review: This extraordinary book combines the traditional biographical format with the visual splendor of color reproductions traditionally found in a museum style art book. "The Red Rose Girls" is in a league all its own, combining history, biography, and art in order to recreate the lives of this amazing group of women. This book brings the reader into the world of these talented artists and goes further to explore the complexities faced by women striving for professional execellence. Carter's book definitely hits the mark, recounting the past and presenting themes that reverberate into present day society. Great!
Rating: Summary: Tree-mendous! Review: This extraordinary book combines the traditional biographical format with the visual splendor of color reproductions traditionally found in a museum style art book. "The Red Rose Girls" is in a league all its own, combining history, biography, and art in order to recreate the lives of this amazing group of women. This book brings the reader into the world of these talented artists and goes further to explore the complexities faced by women striving for professional execellence. Carter's book definitely hits the mark, recounting the past and presenting themes that reverberate into present day society. Great!
Rating: Summary: Red Rose Girls Review: This is an exceptional book. Carter has meticulously documented three significant women in the history of American art and illustration, Jessie Willcox Smith, Elizabeth Shippen Green, and Violet Oakley. It is a must have for anyone interested in the entwined lives and careers of America's first and most successful female artists as the country entered the 20th century. I found the book to be thoroughly researched and thoughtfully written. The Red Rose Girls does a fine job fully detailing their outstanding contributions to the art world and of their life long intimate love. Inspiring are the pages upon pages of lavish reproductions which display their paintings, sketches, research materials, and the revealing personal photographs. Carter's complete documentation satisfies my needs as an artist, educator, and as a witness to America's ever changing social history. This book is the definitive account of the Red Rose Girls' role in American art and I am elated for the long due recognition they so fully deserve. You will not be disappointed in this wonderful book.
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