Florine Stettheimer
By (Author) Karin Althaus
Hirmer Verlag
Hirmer Verlag
12th May 2021
28th January 2021
Germany
General
Non Fiction
Paintings and painting
Human figures depicted in art
Hardback
80
Width 140mm, Height 205mm
280g
"I was thrilled", was Andy Warhol's enthusiastic reaction to the pictures of Florine Stettheimer (1871-1944). Many of the elements of her work inspired his Pop Art. During Stettheimer's life her sensuous and ironic paintings with their numerous figures were valued highly by artists and curators, although the general public remained largely unaware of their merits. Only after her death did her close friend Marcel Duchamp organise a retrospective in the Museum of Modern Art. The art and literature scene of Roaring Twenties New York gathered at Florine Stettheimer's extravagant parties. Surrounded by the cultivated and yet unconventional "Dada flair", the artist staged her pictures as a performance - and was thereby well ahead of her time. As an outstanding painter she was not only at the heart of the American art business, but also attracted attention with her eccentric, subversive and often humorous poems, as well as demonstrating her talent as a stage and costume designer in the theatre. This bibliophile monograph about the multitalented artist is lavishly illustrated and tells a new, exciting history of the modern age through her artworks.
Three decades after the publication of her dissertation, Bloemink is again making the case for Stettheimer as a fascinating, and crucial, figure of art history, one deserving a place in the pantheon of American modernists. * Vogue *
In her thrilling new bookFlorine Stettheimer: A Biography(Hirmer), art historianBarbara Bloeminkpersuasively argues that, with this painting, Stettheimer was trying to find a visual way of communicating her lan...Truer words may never have been written about Stettheimer." * ArtNews *
Karin Althaus is a curator of nineteenth-century paintings and sculpture at the Lenbachhaus in Munich. Susanne Bller is an associate curator at the Lenbachhaus in Munich.