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1 Professionalism as Critical Concept and Historical Process for Women and Art in Canada1
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Chapters in this book
- Front Matter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations vii
- Acknowledgments xvii
- Preface xix
-
Introduction
- Professionalism as Critical Concept and Historical Process for Women and Art in Canada1 3
-
Professionalizing Art
- “What Would He Have Us Do?” Gender and the “Profession” of Artist in New Brunswick in the 1930s and 1940s 55
- The Rewards of Professionalization Alice Lusk Webster and the New Brunswick Museum, 1933–53¹ 83
- “A Story of Struggle and Splendid Courage” Anne Savage’s CBC Broadcasts of The Development of Art in Canada1 106
-
Careers for Women
- Hannah Maynard Crafting Professional Identity 135
- From Amateur to Professional The Advertising Photography of Margaret Watkins, 1924–28 168
- “I Weep for Us Women” Modernism, Feminism, and Suburbia in the Canadian Home Journal’s Home ’53 Design Competition1 194
- Kathleen Daly’s Images of Inuit People Professional Art and the Practice of Ethnography 225
- The Girls and the Grid Montreal Women Abstract Painters in the 1950s and Early 1960s 259
-
The Limits of Professionalism
- “I Want to Call Their Names in Resistance” Writing Aboriginal Women into Canadian Art History, 1880–1970 285
- From “Naturalized Invention” to the Invention of a Tradition: The Victorian Reception of Onkwehonwe Beadwork 327
- Professional/Volunteer Women at the Edmonton Art Gallery, 1923–70 357
- “Marjorie’s Web” Canada’s First Woman Architect and Her Clients1 380
- Contributors 401
- Bibliography 405
- Index 433
Chapters in this book
- Front Matter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations vii
- Acknowledgments xvii
- Preface xix
-
Introduction
- Professionalism as Critical Concept and Historical Process for Women and Art in Canada1 3
-
Professionalizing Art
- “What Would He Have Us Do?” Gender and the “Profession” of Artist in New Brunswick in the 1930s and 1940s 55
- The Rewards of Professionalization Alice Lusk Webster and the New Brunswick Museum, 1933–53¹ 83
- “A Story of Struggle and Splendid Courage” Anne Savage’s CBC Broadcasts of The Development of Art in Canada1 106
-
Careers for Women
- Hannah Maynard Crafting Professional Identity 135
- From Amateur to Professional The Advertising Photography of Margaret Watkins, 1924–28 168
- “I Weep for Us Women” Modernism, Feminism, and Suburbia in the Canadian Home Journal’s Home ’53 Design Competition1 194
- Kathleen Daly’s Images of Inuit People Professional Art and the Practice of Ethnography 225
- The Girls and the Grid Montreal Women Abstract Painters in the 1950s and Early 1960s 259
-
The Limits of Professionalism
- “I Want to Call Their Names in Resistance” Writing Aboriginal Women into Canadian Art History, 1880–1970 285
- From “Naturalized Invention” to the Invention of a Tradition: The Victorian Reception of Onkwehonwe Beadwork 327
- Professional/Volunteer Women at the Edmonton Art Gallery, 1923–70 357
- “Marjorie’s Web” Canada’s First Woman Architect and Her Clients1 380
- Contributors 401
- Bibliography 405
- Index 433