Beyond the Bowes Museum: The Social and Material Worlds of Alphonsine Bowes de Saint-Amand

The activities of Alphonsine Bowes de Saint-Amand, the second wife of John Bowes, as a collector, curator, and patron have been obscured not only because of her gender, but also, and especially, because her contributions to the founders’ collection in the Bowes Museum do not conform to the narrative...

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Main Author: Lindsay Hannah Macnaughton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2021-01-01
Series:19 : Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
Subjects:
Online Access:http://19.bbk.ac.uk/article/id/3348/
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spelling doaj-14cfa64cc5f04d77a8c61d01a3560a582021-08-18T09:05:46ZengOpen Library of Humanities19 : Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century1755-15602021-01-0120203110.16995/ntn.3348Beyond the Bowes Museum: The Social and Material Worlds of Alphonsine Bowes de Saint-AmandLindsay Hannah Macnaughton0History, Durham UniversityThe activities of Alphonsine Bowes de Saint-Amand, the second wife of John Bowes, as a collector, curator, and patron have been obscured not only because of her gender, but also, and especially, because her contributions to the founders’ collection in the Bowes Museum do not conform to the narrative arc of traditional collecting stories based around a single collector or collecting couple. As the ‘third wheel’ of the already complex double collecting history of the museum, her contributions have up until now conveniently been erased based on moral issues and the deterioration of her second marriage. Moralizing judgements, gendered decorative choices, and aggressive legal claims on the estate conspired to erase her autonomy as a collector, despite her social status and position in important literary circles of nineteenth-century France. As a result, her own independent contributions beyond the Bowes Museum have also been overlooked. Analysing archival and material sources in France and Britain within the complex legal frameworks surrounding women’s property and marital and inheritance laws in France, Britain, and Switzerland, this article shows how the social worlds, interests, and aesthetic tastes of Alphonsine Bowes de Saint-Amand had a far greater influence in collections on both sides of the Channel than has ever been acknowledged.http://19.bbk.ac.uk/article/id/3348/women collectorsFrench artBowes Museum
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lindsay Hannah Macnaughton
spellingShingle Lindsay Hannah Macnaughton
Beyond the Bowes Museum: The Social and Material Worlds of Alphonsine Bowes de Saint-Amand
19 : Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
women collectors
French art
Bowes Museum
author_facet Lindsay Hannah Macnaughton
author_sort Lindsay Hannah Macnaughton
title Beyond the Bowes Museum: The Social and Material Worlds of Alphonsine Bowes de Saint-Amand
title_short Beyond the Bowes Museum: The Social and Material Worlds of Alphonsine Bowes de Saint-Amand
title_full Beyond the Bowes Museum: The Social and Material Worlds of Alphonsine Bowes de Saint-Amand
title_fullStr Beyond the Bowes Museum: The Social and Material Worlds of Alphonsine Bowes de Saint-Amand
title_full_unstemmed Beyond the Bowes Museum: The Social and Material Worlds of Alphonsine Bowes de Saint-Amand
title_sort beyond the bowes museum: the social and material worlds of alphonsine bowes de saint-amand
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series 19 : Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
issn 1755-1560
publishDate 2021-01-01
description The activities of Alphonsine Bowes de Saint-Amand, the second wife of John Bowes, as a collector, curator, and patron have been obscured not only because of her gender, but also, and especially, because her contributions to the founders’ collection in the Bowes Museum do not conform to the narrative arc of traditional collecting stories based around a single collector or collecting couple. As the ‘third wheel’ of the already complex double collecting history of the museum, her contributions have up until now conveniently been erased based on moral issues and the deterioration of her second marriage. Moralizing judgements, gendered decorative choices, and aggressive legal claims on the estate conspired to erase her autonomy as a collector, despite her social status and position in important literary circles of nineteenth-century France. As a result, her own independent contributions beyond the Bowes Museum have also been overlooked. Analysing archival and material sources in France and Britain within the complex legal frameworks surrounding women’s property and marital and inheritance laws in France, Britain, and Switzerland, this article shows how the social worlds, interests, and aesthetic tastes of Alphonsine Bowes de Saint-Amand had a far greater influence in collections on both sides of the Channel than has ever been acknowledged.
topic women collectors
French art
Bowes Museum
url http://19.bbk.ac.uk/article/id/3348/
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