Before becoming an art historian, Abigail
Solomon-Godeau was a freelance critic, curator and photographic critic
and historian. Her first book, Photography at the
Dock: Essays on Photographic History, Institutions, and Practices was
published by the University of Minnesota Press in 1991. Her second, Male
Trouble: A Crisis in Representation, on
the imagery of masculinity in French neoclassicism, was published by
Thames
& Hudson in 1997. A third book, The Face of Difference:
Gender, Race and the Politics of Self-Representation is forthcoming
from Duke University Press. Her essays have appeared in such journals
as Art in America, Artforum, The Art Journal, Afterimage, Camera Obscura,
October, Screen, and have been widely anthologized and translated into
various languages. Among the exhibitions she has curated are "The
Way We Live Now" (1982),
"Sexual Difference: Both Sides of the Camera," (1992),"Mistaken
Identities" (with Constance Lewallen) 1994; "The Image of
Desire; Femininity, Modernity, and the Birth of Mass Culture in Nineteenth-Century
France" (with Beatrice Farwell) in 1998. She is currently working on
as book entitled Genre, Gender and the Nude in French Art. |
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French painting (1780—1900), 19th-century French graphic
art, contemporary art and theory, history of photography, feminism and
art history, and on a graduate level, critical and feminist theory, theories
of representation, psychoanalytic theory, and periodically, the proseminar
for incoming graduate students. |
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