Available Formats
May Alcott Nieriker, Author and Advocate: Travel Writing and Transformation in the Late Nineteenth Century
By (Author) Julia Dabbs
Anthem Press
Anthem Press
1st March 2022
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Feminism and feminist theory
Travel guides: museums, historic sites, galleries etc
Individual artists, art monographs
Gender studies: women and girls
818.403
Hardback
232
Width 153mm, Height 229mm, Spine 26mm
454g
May Alcott Nieriker, Author and Advocate examines in-depth the writings on art and travel by the youngest sister of famed novelist Louisa May Alcott. Like other American women in the later nineteenth century, due to her gender May was unable to receive the advanced training and exhibition opportunities in the USA that she needed to become a notable professional painter. An additional obstacle was her familys insecure financial status, making it difficult to study abroad for training. Fortunately, thanks to Louisas generosity May was able to make three extended trips to London and Paris in order to gain further training, and eventually attained the honor of having two paintings accepted into the Paris Salon. However, this book argues that Alcott Nierikers main contributions to cultural history were not necessarily her artistic creations, but rather her publications on travel and artspecifically, four articles for the Boston Evening Transcript and an 1879 guidebook, Studying Art Abroad and How To Do It Cheaply. In these works May sought to transform the art world, and social mores, through her advocacy for the rights of women to have equal access to a professional, artistic career.
Julia K. Dabbs is a Distinguished University Teaching Professor of art history at the University of Minnesota, Morris. She has published widely on early modern women artists, as well as the nineteenth-century American artist, May Alcott Nieriker.