Women Who Read Are Dangerous

by Stefan Bollman

Hardcover, 2016

Publication

Abbeville Press (2016), Edition: 1, 156 pages

Description

"A compendium of more than 70 iconic works of art featuring women who read, from the Virgin Mary to Marilyn Monroe"--

User reviews

LibraryThing member murderbydeath
This is a beautifully made book; one that feels lovely in the hands and it's a pleasure to leaf through the pages and admire the art.

I just shouldn't have read it.

Full disclosure:

1. I was expecting a different premise based on the synopsis I read. I had the impression that this would be a
Show More
collection of art anecdotally tied to the strides women have made throughout history as it relates to the time period each piece was created. That misconception is on me.

2. The sum total of my knowledge about art is limited to recognising the work of a 'top 10' master when I see it. I'm not sure it goes much further than that. That too, is on me.

With those two points in mind, I was disappointed by this book; I was hoping to learn something about the artists, about what was going on with women when these pieces were created, or what effect books and spreading literacy was having on society in general. Instead, I learned - or was reminded, really - what a pretentious prat sounds like.

I almost didn't include that last line in this review, because it feels fundamentally unfair: I don't know this writer, I don't know that he's a pretentious prat. Perhaps he's regurgitating what is considered canon in the the art world. Maybe he has primary source material that backs up the assertions he makes about the paintings he includes. It might even be a bad translation - it was originally written in German.

All I have to go by is what I'm reading on the page and my interpretation is totally and completely subjective.

BUT - so is art. it's possible it's the most subjective of all mediums, and Bollman delivers his opinions as though they were objective fact. On page after page he tells the reader what they're seeing: from the emotions on the faces of the subjects to the meaning of trivial objects in the backgrounds. He offers no explanation for his interpretations, almost no background information about the painters themselves and nothing about the society they were written in. Any of these things would have made his narrative more palatable, more educational, and given the reader more to consider while studying the pieces. Instead, he just tells us what we're meant to think.

So, I figure, if he can look at a painting and tell me what it means, I can read his words and tell him he sounds like a pretentious prat, and we'll call it even.
Show Less
LibraryThing member Brightman
Terrific book, great theme, excellent art, good information
LibraryThing member weird_O
The title is arresting, but not really born out by the text and images. This is a coffee table book for those whose coffee tables are small. It's nicely printed and bound. The author, Stefon Bollmann, seems knowledgeable and interesting. Most spreads present a full-color image of a woman reading
Show More
something—a letter, a magazine, a book. Opposite is a squib about the image, or the subject, or the artist.

For example, paired with a photo of Marilyn Monroe by Eve Arnold is this passage:

The question "Did she or didn't she?" is almost unavoidable. Did Marilyn Monroe, the blonde sex symbol of the twentieth century, read James Joyce's Ulysses, a twentieth-century icon of highbrow culture and the book many consider to be the greatest modern novel—or was she only pretending? For, as other images from the same photographic session make clear, Ulysses is the book that Marilyn is seen reading here.
  A professor of literature, Richard Brown, wanted to find out. Thirty years after the photo session, he wrote to the photographer, who ought to know the answer. Eve Arnold replied that Marilyn was already reading Ulysses when they met. Marilyn had said that she liked the style of the book; she would read it aloud in order to understand it better, but it was hard work. Before the photo shoot, Marilyn was reading Ulysses while Arnold loaded her film. And this was how she was photographed. We need not pursue Professor Brown's fantasy that Marilyn continued her reading of Ulysses, registered at a college, and abandoned her life as a movie star so as to further her research into Joyce, and that as a retired college lecturer she looked back on the exciting days of her youth.
  But we can follow Professor Brown's recommendation to read Ulysses as Marilyn did: not in sequence, from start to finish, but episodically, by opening the book at different points and reading in short bursts. We could perhaps call this disorganized way of reading the Marilyn method. At any rate, Professor Brown recommends it to his students.
Show Less
LibraryThing member LynnB
I found this book very interesting. In fact, I imagine I may have studied art history had it been taught this way -- thematically about a subject (in this case, women reading as subversive) that intrigued me. I loved examining and thinking about the lovely art works displayed in the book. I wish
Show More
the book had included Asian or African works as well as Western ones. Would we find parallels or major differences?

Having no background in art or art history, I don't know to what extent the descriptions in the book are generally accepted as accurate or seen as marginal. In either case, they are thought-provoking and I think good art (including books) is art that makes you think.
Show Less

Original publication date

2005 (1e édition originale allemande)
2006 (1e traduction et édition française, Flammarion)
2015-05-13 (Nouvelle édition française, Flammarion)

Pages

156

ISBN

0789212560 / 9780789212566
Page: 0.1234 seconds