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      • Trusted Partner
        The Arts
        November 2022

        Painting her pleasure

        Three women artists and the nude in early twentieth-century Paris

        by Lauren Jimerson

        In France, women were banned from studying live nude models in public art institutions until the end of the nineteenth century. Social mores discouraged women from gazing at their own naked bodies, let alone another woman's. But three artists, Suzanne Valadon, Émilie Charmy and Marie Vassilieff, painted the nude without inhibition, rupturing conventions and reversing gender roles. This book sheds light on these pioneering women, previously marginalised within art history, each of whom recast the nude in accordance with her own perception of gender, sexuality and the self. At the same time, it argues that the participation of women artists was the very thing that made modernism modern.

      • Trusted Partner
        The Arts
        June 2025

        Painting her pleasure

        Three women artists and the nude in avant-garde Paris

        by Lauren Jimerson

        An inspiring account of three women artists who pioneered new forms of the nude. Even in the bohemian world of avant-garde Paris, certain rules had to be obeyed. One of these rules was that women artists did not paint nudes. Yet three women would challenge this prohibition, offering their own distinct takes on the classic genre. Suzanne Valadon, Émilie Charmy and Marie Vassilieff painted in different styles, but they were united in their fascination for the nude. Their artistic explorations saw them experimenting with a range of cutting-edge subjects, including the male nude, the Black female nude, the pregnant nude and the nude self-portrait, a genre that few artists would tackle until half a century later. Painting her pleasure situates the work of Valadon, Charmy and Vassilieff within and against modernism, drawing parallels with later feminist artists and philosophers. Unravelling the complexities of early twentieth-century gender regimes and persistent cultural stereotypes, it provides an illuminating history of women, sexuality and the body.

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