Books by Jacqueline Marie Musacchio
This is the first book to examine the art and life of Boston-born artist Francesca Alexander (183... more This is the first book to examine the art and life of Boston-born artist Francesca Alexander (1837–1917). Francesca and her parents moved to Florence in 1853 and became part of a thriving international community. Her long residence in Italy was important; Francesca was a largely self-taught artist, and both her art and writing focused on Italians and Italian life. Her portraits and nature studies, and her translations of songs and stories, were celebrated by people from all walks of life, including John Ruskin, who published three of her manuscripts and promoted her work to his followers. She used her earnings from the sale of these publications, and her art, to fund her many charitable endeavours; both friends and admirers marvelled at her saintly character, which they linked to a romantic view of Italy itself. Nonetheless, in spite of her celebrity on both sides of the Atlantic, she has been largely forgotten. Drawing on her art and writings, as well as letters, diaries, guidebooks, newspapers, and magazines, this book provides a vivid biography of Francesca Alexander, her art, and her place in history.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Although we live in an era when vast sums of money are lavished on wedding festivities, we are no... more Although we live in an era when vast sums of money are lavished on wedding festivities, we are not unique: in Renaissance Italy, middle- and upper-class families spent enormous amounts on marriages that were intended to establish or consolidate the status and lineage of one or both of the respective families. This lavishly illustrated book explores the social and economic background to marriage in Renaissance Florence and discusses the objects—paintings, sculptures, furniture, jewelry, clothing, and household items—associated with marriage and ongoing family life. By analyzing urban palaces and their furnishings, Jacqueline Marie Musacchio shows how families interacted with art on a daily basis. This began at marriage, when the bride brought a dowry and the groom provided the home and its furnishings. It continued with the accumulation of objects during the marriage and the birth of children. And it ended with the redistribution of these same objects at death. Through the examination of art, documents, literature, and more, this lively book traces the life cycle of the Florentine Renaissance family through the art and objects that surrounded them in their home.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Childbirth in Renaissance Italy was encouraged, celebrated, and commemorated with a wide range of... more Childbirth in Renaissance Italy was encouraged, celebrated, and commemorated with a wide range of objects, from wooden trays and bowls and maiolica wares to paintings, sculpture, clothing, linens, and food. This groundbreaking book examines for the first time the appearance, meaning, and function of these childbirth objects. It also describes the social and cultural context in which they were created, purchased, and bestowed. In doing so, the book offers many insights into Renaissance daily life. Jacqueline Marie Musacchio draws on surviving works of art as well as contemporary and largely unpublished inventories, diaries, and letters, to illustrate the strong bond between the art and rituals of childbirth in Renaissance Italy. She describes a family-centered society seeking to rebuild itself in the wake of the catastrophic population decline wrought by the Black Death. Birth objects were symbols of fertility that encouraged pregnancy. But they were also rewards for procreation that congratulated the new mother. To demonstrate this, Musacchio investigates how objects were given, lent, bought, or commissioned as part of marriage and birth rituals, and how particular images and objects were regarded as aids to pregnancy and birth. For a variety of reasons, she concludes that childbirth objects served as necessary mediating devices between the real and ideal worlds.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Articles by Jacqueline Marie Musacchio
George Eliot’s Romola (1863), a carefully researched work of historical fiction set in Savonarola... more George Eliot’s Romola (1863), a carefully researched work of historical fiction set in Savonarolan Florence, appealed to many Anglo-Americans in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. With its detailed descriptions of Renaissance Florence, Romola served as a sort of guidebook, its narrative providing both real and virtual travelers with an informative and easy-to-follow itinerary. But an especially popular edition, published by Tauchnitz in Leipzig beginning in 1863, further engaged travelers, who extra-illustrated it with photographs of the popular art and monuments that were part of Elliot’s narrative. Examination of dozens of these volumes, as well as contemporary sales accounts, diaries, letters, and popular press, reveals that some travelers chose each photograph individually, while others bought pre-assembled sets; the volumes were then fitted with decorative endpapers and specially bound with stamped and gilded parchment or vellum in local stationary shops. Less expensive than a painting or sculpture, and more personalized and portable, these volumes allowed travelers to carry home Renaissance Florence, as a souvenir of their journey to be paged through for years, as a statement of their erudition to share with others who might not make such a journey themselves, and, of course, as a reflection of the market for Italian Renaissance art and culture in the late nineteenth century.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Entries on Emma C. Church, Horatia A.L Freeman, Harriet G. Hosmer, Abby A. Manning, Marie S. Stillman, Anne Whitney, and Abigail O. and Mary E. Williams in Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon, edited by Andreas Beyer, Bénédicte Savoy, and Wolf Tegethoff. Berlin and Boston: Walter de Gruyter, 2022.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Although Boston-born sculptor Florence Freeman (1836–83) is little known today, she spent most of... more Although Boston-born sculptor Florence Freeman (1836–83) is little known today, she spent most of her career as a member of the Anglo-American community in Rome. The discovery of a chimneypiece she exhibited at Philadelphia’s Centennial Exposition in 1876—one of only three identifiable sculptures by her hand—is the basis for an analysis of her life and work, her connections with other artists and with actress and benefactor Charlotte Cushman, and her death, demonstrating how a woman could position herself to have a fulfilling life as an artist in late nineteenth-century Rome.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Working in the physics laboratory at Wellesley College in early 1896, a team of women faculty and... more Working in the physics laboratory at Wellesley College in early 1896, a team of women faculty and students, led by Sarah Frances Whiting, carried out some of the first successful x-ray experiments in the United States. Whiting's experiments were the first in an undergraduate institution, as well as the first by a woman, and they reveal much about the role of Wellesley in the history of science education. Photographs made from the original glass plates were recently rediscovered in a campus building slated for demolition; they are published here for the first time.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
This essay looks at the life of Jane M. Healey Jackson (1829-1916), the wife of sculptor John Ada... more This essay looks at the life of Jane M. Healey Jackson (1829-1916), the wife of sculptor John Adams Jackson (1825-1879). Unlike the dealers selling historical art analyzed elsewhere in this volume, Jane actively cultivated and entertained a lively social network in order to promote her husband’s career as a contemporary artist to American travelers in Florence and citizens in the Boston area and elsewhere. With evidence from letters, diaries, newspaper accounts, and a rich autograph album, this essay tells the story of a purposeful domestic life in concert with her husband’s profession, and as such it can serve as a potential model for the study of the many other women abroad who have escaped notice. It illustrates both the network and the endeavors of a sculptor’s wife abroad, working to promote her husband's career and their social status in Florence and beyond.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
The English aesthete Sir Horace Walpole (1717—97) is well known for advancing the eighteenth-cent... more The English aesthete Sir Horace Walpole (1717—97) is well known for advancing the eighteenth-century Gothic revival in England through his architectural and literary efforts. In 1747 he bought and began to rebuild Strawberry Hill, his home in Twickenham outside London; its crenellations, turrets, and stained glass derive ultimately from earlier Gothic buildings and stood in sharp contrast to the solid classicism of contemporary English architecture. He employed similarly fantastic textual elements in his novel The Castle of Otranto (1764) and play The Mysterious Mother (1768), with their disconcerting but decidedly Gothic themes of prophetic death and mistaken identities on one hand and incest on the other. This essay examines a related and in fact earlier aspect of Walpole’s Gothic sensibility: his attraction to Florence and its Medici rulers, particularly Grand Duchess Bianca Cappello (1548—1587), lover then wife of Francesco I de’Medici. Although Walpole’s attraction to Bianca echoed, in some ways, that of his contemporaries, the multiple objects he acquired as tangible manifestations of that attraction demonstrate the especially strong hold her strikingly Gothic biography exerted on him throughout his life.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Like so many late nineteenth-century New Englanders, the citizens of Salem, Massachusetts were fa... more Like so many late nineteenth-century New Englanders, the citizens of Salem, Massachusetts were fascinated by Italy. Many of the women artists who went to Italy before, during, and after the American Civil War came from Salem, including the sisters Abigail Osgood (1823-1913) and Mary Elizabeth (1825-1902) Williams, known collectively as the Misses Williams. The sisters were middle class and unmarried, and needed their art to be self-supporting; Italian travel allowed them to create complex paintings and projects that culminated in the establishment of a successful studio selling Italian art and objects from their Salem home in 1886. They created their own paintings, sought out buyers, entered exhibitions, accumulated objects, and even researched art history, much of it with a focus on supplying middle-class women like themselves with fashionable objects to fill their homes. Their success as women who made and marketed art for and to other women distinguishes them both at home and abroad and demonstrates a new and gendered market that promoted an understanding of Italy and its cultural history in the greater Boston area.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
In Florence as elsewhere in early modern Europe, love and desire were rarely part of marriage dec... more In Florence as elsewhere in early modern Europe, love and desire were rarely part of marriage decisions. Attitudes toward the adulterous behavior that often resulted from these decisions were reflected and reinforced in texts like Celio Malespini’s Ducento Novelle (1609). His cryptic reference to an unidentified palace hung with horns and strewn with excrement builds a context for late sixteenth-century Florentine
attitudes toward adulterous wives and cuckolded husbands. Outside evidence proves that this palace belonged to the Venetian noblewoman Bianca Cappello. Born in 1548, she eloped to Florence with the socially inferior Piero Buonaventuri, conducted a fourteen-year- long affair with Francesco de’Medici, bore his son while Francesco was still married to his first wife, and finally married him in 1578 only to be quite
possibly poisoned by her brother-in- law Ferdinando in 1587. So it is no surprise that both scholars and the general public gravitate to the sensational when discussing Bianca, from the time of Malespini onward. His casual reference to her defiled palace, implying her prostitution and her husband Piero’s impotence, helps us better understand late sixteenth-century Florentine attitudes toward adultery and cuckoldry.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
This article and the associated maps and timeline use Anne Whitney’s letters as the framework for... more This article and the associated maps and timeline use Anne Whitney’s letters as the framework for an examination of the art and life of an American artist abroad. It illustrates Whitney’s first sixteen months of travel through these and other contemporary sources to visualize her movement and activities through space and time. This project seeks to revise the impression of Henry James’s “white, marmorean flock” as a collective and look at Whitney as an individual with unique reactions to Italy, informed not only by the celebrated works of art and architecture around her but also by the experience of life abroad in all of its complexity.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
The sculptor Lorado Taft (1860-1936) wanted all Americans to experience great works of art in the... more The sculptor Lorado Taft (1860-1936) wanted all Americans to experience great works of art in their school and museum collections. But Taft also had a very particular definition of art; for him, art meant sculpture in the classical tradition by the great Ancient and Renaissance masters. He expressed this pedagogical agenda with great enthusiasm and persistence over his long career and he took part in a variety of popular activities to bring art to the wider population. Primary among these were his many lectures and publications, as well as his never-built Dream Museum of plaster casts, his peep shows, or dioramas, of famous artists’ studios, and his children’s play, The Gates of Paradise. With the use of such diverse media – literary, visual, and performative – Taft sought to elevate understanding of the past as a means to cultural betterment for schoolchildren, using the collecting and display of art to make a better world.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Despite the great emphasis on the material culture of Renaissance Florence – in both surviving ob... more Despite the great emphasis on the material culture of Renaissance Florence – in both surviving objects and documents, as well as secondary literature and, by extension, this essay – it is important to remember that the basic furnishings of urban dwellings were similar throughout much of early modern Europe. While allowing for changes due to regional materials and taste, the increased movement of both objects and artisans made these similarities even more widespread. They provided a recognizable and eminently appropriate setting for the great emphasis on family life that flourished during this time. As the examples cited here indicate, these were functional and often didactic objects, and a great many were also aesthetically pleasing. They enforced familial and personal identity, social standing, and domestic roles; without them, our understanding of family life, and especially the lives of the women who lived so closely with these objects, would be much less vivid.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Emma Conant Church (1831–1893) was an American artist who had a successful career painting both o... more Emma Conant Church (1831–1893) was an American artist who had a successful career painting both original works of art and Old Master copies in the United States and Europe. She became part of the sizable foreign artist communities in Paris and Rome, where American artists, and particularly female artists, attracted much attention. In the era before originals and photographs were widely available and affordable, women like Church enjoyed great success – and an emancipated lifestyle – by catering their artistic production to the needs of travelers who sought out souvenirs of their time abroad.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Uploads
Books by Jacqueline Marie Musacchio
Articles by Jacqueline Marie Musacchio
attitudes toward adulterous wives and cuckolded husbands. Outside evidence proves that this palace belonged to the Venetian noblewoman Bianca Cappello. Born in 1548, she eloped to Florence with the socially inferior Piero Buonaventuri, conducted a fourteen-year- long affair with Francesco de’Medici, bore his son while Francesco was still married to his first wife, and finally married him in 1578 only to be quite
possibly poisoned by her brother-in- law Ferdinando in 1587. So it is no surprise that both scholars and the general public gravitate to the sensational when discussing Bianca, from the time of Malespini onward. His casual reference to her defiled palace, implying her prostitution and her husband Piero’s impotence, helps us better understand late sixteenth-century Florentine attitudes toward adultery and cuckoldry.
attitudes toward adulterous wives and cuckolded husbands. Outside evidence proves that this palace belonged to the Venetian noblewoman Bianca Cappello. Born in 1548, she eloped to Florence with the socially inferior Piero Buonaventuri, conducted a fourteen-year- long affair with Francesco de’Medici, bore his son while Francesco was still married to his first wife, and finally married him in 1578 only to be quite
possibly poisoned by her brother-in- law Ferdinando in 1587. So it is no surprise that both scholars and the general public gravitate to the sensational when discussing Bianca, from the time of Malespini onward. His casual reference to her defiled palace, implying her prostitution and her husband Piero’s impotence, helps us better understand late sixteenth-century Florentine attitudes toward adultery and cuckoldry.