Drawing for an audience of one: art in Muriel Draper's archives

Author(s)Armandroff, Olivia
Date Accessioned2021-01-13T18:28:11Z
Date Available2021-01-13T18:28:11Z
Publication Date2020
SWORD Update2020-09-20T19:04:34Z
AbstractMuriel Draper, a much-overlooked author and tastemaker in early-twentieth-century New York, was a cosmopolitan woman with eclectic interests, including mysticism, the Soviet Union, and the Harlem Renaissance. Today, Draper is best known through the voice of others and their reminiscences of her salon. Gatherings she convened and attended in Europe and America in the first half of the twentieth century set her and her work in dialog with a group of leading artists, writers, musicians, and social influencers. Not easily definable, her friends, including Mark Tobey, Carl Van Vechten, and Max Ewing, sought to come to terms with her uniqueness and capture her true nature through drawings, photographs, and sculptural portraits. But she never succumbed to their desires. Instead, in life and in death, Draper cannily crafted her own image, both participating in and rejecting the statuses assigned to her. She consciously curated her archive at Yale University by collecting and depositing correspondence, drawings, and photographs which provide evidence of a woman who enchanted nearly everyone who met her. As perhaps a final project of design, Draper created an arrival “portrait” of herself that left significant gaps, and an enduring air of mystery. The thesis asks whether we can identify a material trace of an ephemeral salon and its hostess. It interrogates how the intimate, collaborative relationships established between intellectual peers in such a salon setting can be recorded and preserved in artistic form. It also uses Draper’s example to explore larger notions about legacy, history, and remembrance. How could a woman who so carefully curated and bequeathed an archival record of her life be so quickly forgotten and erased from the annals of history? When she is remembered, is it as she desired? Was Draper a woman of her time, or one distinct from it, and is it her more common traits or her unique eccentricities that survive today?en_US
AdvisorRoeber, Catharine Dann
AdvisorIsenstadt, Sandy
DegreeM.A.
ProgramUniversity of Delaware, Winterthur Program in American Material Culture
Unique Identifier1230503339
URLhttps://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/28485
Languageen
PublisherUniversity of Delawareen_US
URIhttps://login.udel.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/dissertations-theses/drawing-audience-one-art-muriel-drapers-archives/docview/2451128551/se-2?accountid=10457
KeywordsCaricatureen_US
KeywordsFashion
KeywordsFeminism
KeywordsModernism
KeywordsSalon Culture
KeywordsWomen authors
KeywordsSoviet Union
KeywordsSocial influencers
KeywordsYale University
KeywordsNew York
TitleDrawing for an audience of one: art in Muriel Draper's archivesen_US
TypeThesisen_US
Files
Original bundle
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
Armandroff_udel_0060M_14208.pdf
Size:
93.95 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format
License bundle
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
No Thumbnail Available
Name:
license.txt
Size:
2.22 KB
Format:
Item-specific license agreed upon to submission
Description: