Gluck : art and identity
Amy De La Haye (Editor), Martin Pel (Editor), Royal Pavilion, Art Gallery, and Museums (Host institution)
"Hannah Gluckstein (who called herself Gluck; 1895-1978) was a distinctive, original voice in the early evolution of modern art in Britain. This handsome book presents a major reassessment of Gluck's life and work, examining, among other things, the artist's numerous personal relationships and contemporary notions of gender and social history. Gluck's paintings comprise a full range of artistic genres--still life, landscape, portraiture--as well as images of popular entertainers. Financially independent and somewhat freed from social convention, Gluck highlighted her sexual identity, cutting her hair short and dressing as a man, and the artist is known for a powerful series of self-portraits that played with conventions of masculinity and femininity. Richly illustrated, this volume is a timely and significant contribution to gender studies and to the understanding of a complex and important modern painte"-- Provided by publisher
Print Book, English, 2017
Yale University Press, New Haven, 2017