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Maria Sibylla Merian

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In 1679, the commentator Joachim von Sandrart described Maria Sibylla Merian (1647-1717) as a painter who had perfected the art of the miniature and of flower painting, a high and deserved honour. Posthumously, however, it is Merian's status as an entomologist or naturalist that has garnered the most attention; she has not received her due as an artist. This book remedies this situation and assists the reader in understanding Merian's life as a woman and as an artist in the early modern Dutch Republic. Using Merian's hundreds of extant watercolours and book illustrations as sources, in combination with her surviving correspondence and with contemporary art treatises, Catherine Powell-Warren recognizes the artistic contributions of Maria Sibylla Merian, and situates them in their socio-cultural and creative context. This book is the first to consider Merian's art and art-historical significance: her artistic range; her techniques; the rich visual rhetoric she deployed in her works; and her innovations. Merian may not have been a guild member, but she was for all intents and purposes the head of a for-profit business (a 'master'), seeing to the training of her daughters and managing a successful workshop, publishing her works, and networking to secure patrons and resources. Considering the impediments she faced as a woman, her achievements as an artist, as well as in other realms, can be considered noteworthy and perhaps even extraordinary.
Catherine Powell-Warren is an assistant professor of art history at KU Leuven. She completed a post-doctoral research fellowship, sponsored by the Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek at Ghent University, focusing on the role of women in the early modern arts of the Low Countries.
Series Foreword; Acknowledgements; Introduction; 1 The Arc of a Peripatetic Career; 2 The Art of Nature in Print: Merian's Early Books; 3 Creativity and Innovation in Metamorphosis; 4 A Family Workshop: Marketing Matriarchy; 5 Flowers, Art, and Collectors; 6 'It is here, Reader, that I ask you to stop with me for a little while, so you can be amazed...': Reception and Legacy; Epilogue; Notes; Bibliography; Image credits; Index
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