Available Formats
Helena Rubinstein: The Australian Years
By (Author) Angus Trumble
Black Inc.
La Trobe University Press
4th July 2023
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Gender studies: women and girls
Business and Management
Paperback
304
Width 154mm, Height 233mm, Spine 26mm
430g
The captivating story of the first global cosmetics empire, the fascinating woman who built it, and the past she preferred to leave behind This meticulously researched and wryly entertaining portrait of Helena Rubinstein (1872-1965) focuses on the years she spent in Australia as a young woman, recovering a 'lost' chapter in the grand narrative of the woman who created one of the first global cosmetics corporations. At its height, Rubinstein's brand was synonymous with elegance and employed 30,000 women around the world. Rubinstein arrived in Australia from Poland when she was twenty-three years old. She lived in Australia for the next eleven years, working first as a governess and then as a waitress, before opening her first beauty salon in Melbourne. In later years, owing to the degree of control she exercised over her glamorous image, many details of her early life in Australia were suppressed. But the events she airbrushed out of her own myth reveal the surprising origins of her extraordinary rise. In this absorbing book, we see her laying the foundations for a global empire. With a foreword by Sarah Krasnostein 'An unforgettable portrait of a four-foot ten-inch female Jewish business genius/dynamo. Apart from admiring the extraordinary scholarship, I chuckled at many points at the dry humour - concerning, for example, the mysterious doctor working with raw materials found only in the Carpathian Mountains. The author is also an excellent art and fashion critic.' -Robert Manne
Angus Trumble (1964-2022) was senior research fellow at the National Museum of Australia and a former director of the National Portrait Gallery. He was senior curator of paintings and sculpture at the Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, Conn. until January 2014. His previous books include Love and Death- Art in the Age of Queen Victoria (2001), A Brief History of the Smile (2004), The Finger- A Handbook (2010) and Edwardian Opulence- British Art at the Dawn of the Twentieth Century, co-edited with Andrea Wolk Rager (2013). In 2015, he was elected a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities.