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Women Who Rattled the Gilded
Cage
Before Victoria: Extraordinary Women of the British
Romantic Era Opens April 8 at The New York Public Library
New York, March 17, 2005 -- While the image of the woman as angel
of the house, sexless and selfless, was already an ideal by 1789, there lived
throngs of flesh and blood women who variously bent, broke, ignored, circumvented,
and changed the rules of British (and sometimes world) culture during the
late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. The lives, works, pluck,
and influence of the most formidable, famous, and infamous among them are
the focus of Before Victoria: Extraordinary Women of the British
Romantic Era, an eye-opening exhibition of rare manuscripts,
letters, prints, paintings, memoirs, and other artifacts of the time, opening
April 8, 2005 at The New York Public Library. The exhibition, co-curated
by Stephen Wagner and Elizabeth Campbell Denlinger, is drawn from the Library’s
Carl H. Pforzheimer Collection of Shelley and His Circle; the Miriam and
Ira D. Wallach Division of Art, Prints and Photographs; the Henry W. and
Albert A. Berg Collection of English and American Literature; the Spencer
Collection; the Rare Books Division; and the General Research Division. Before
Victoria will be on view April 8 through July 30, 2005 in the
D. Samuel and Jeane H. Gottesman Exhibition Hall on the first floor of The
New York Public Library, Humanities and Social Sciences Library, Fifth Avenue
and 42nd Street. Admission is free.
Who Were These Unusual Women?
Everyone knows Mary Shelley as the teen-aged author of Frankenstein. Fewer
remember Shelley’s more radical mother, Mary Wollstonecraft, whose 1792 Vindication
of the Rights of Woman reverberated through British culture for generations
and whose egalitarian child-rearing theories were followed by the likes of
Aaron Burr. And how well-known today is Lord Byron’s daughter, Ada, whose
keen mathematical mind devised an early computer programming language? Even
less familiar are names such as: Mary Robinson, who lived as wife, actress,
novelist, poet, and mistress to the Prince of Wales; Princess Charlotte, whose
popularity equaled, and wisdom apparently surpassed that of the Windsors’ Diana
when she went on the lam from the royal but loveless match made for her by
her father, the future George IV; best-selling poet Felicia Hemans; and the
cross-dressing Levantine exile, Lady Hester Stanhope.
Caroline Norton’s impassioned writings and political machinations resulted
in the passage of the first law enabling maternal custody of young children.
Anna Atkins was a marine biologist and photographic pioneer. The era’s
most important stage comedienne, Dora Jordan, was also the mother of ten children
sired by the Duke of Clarence, later King William IV. These are just a few
of the women who sought self-knowledge and expression along improbable paths.
While many are notable for their achievements, others are exemplary for their
vices, desires, preferences, and dissent: gamblers, adulterers, “female
husbands,” and prostitutes among them. And there are the women whose
renown has never faded, including Jane Austen, Sarah Siddons, Mary Lamb, and
Emma Hamilton.
Exhibition Materials Before Victoria: Extraordinary Women of the British Romantic Era presents
a wealth of materials from its subjects’ own hands: first editions of Frankenstein;
or the Modern Prometheus and Pride and Prejudice, of course,
but also of Ann Radcliffe’s Mysteries of Udolpho, a much more
popular novel in its time than Austen’s work. There is much of the writing
of Wollstonecraft and examples of the moralizing books of her conservative
counterpart, the abolitionist Hannah More. There is artwork by Caroline Watson,
one of a very few female engravers, and by the painters Angelica Kauffmann
and Maria Cosway. Representing the sciences are Anna Atkins’s Photographs
of British Algae; polymath Mary Somerville’s On Molecular and
Microscopic Science; a letter from the astronomer (and discoverer of eight
comets) Caroline Herschel; and examples of science and mathematical textbooks
written especially for girls. Also on display is the suicide note left behind
by the poet Percy Shelley’s first wife, Harriet Westbrook Shelley, just
before drowning herself in London’s Hyde Park; the serialized memoirs
of courtesan (and blackmailer) Harriette Wilson; the prophecies of millenarian
Joanna Southcott, who thought she was pregnant with a new messiah; and a letter
to George III from Margaret Nicholson, who attacked the King with a dessert
knife in 1786.
The exhibition also includes ample contextual materials from the Romantic era,
much of it in response to these extraordinary women. As this was the golden
age of British visual satire, a number of the subjects are seen pilloried in
prints by Thomas Rowlandson, the Cruikshanks, and James Gillray (whose own
publisher was a woman). There is Harris’s List of Covent-Garden Ladies, a
veritable Zagat’s guide to the prostitutes of London; issues of the Crim.
Con. Gazette,which published libelous gossip on criminal conversation
(i.e., adultery) cases real and imagined; and a rare example of a private Act
of Parliament for a divorce—the only means of obtaining one. And from
the sympathetic Irish Economist William Thompson, there is Appeal of One
Half the Human Race, Women, Against the Pretension of the Other Half, Men,
to Retain Them in Political, and Thence in Civil and Domestic Slavery.
Co-curator Elizabeth Campbell Denlinger has written a vividly illustrated companion
volume to Before Victoria: Extraordinary Women of the British Romantic
Era. Published by Columbia University Press, Before Victoria features
a foreword by Lyndall Gordon and is available in paperback ($29.50) and hard
cover ($39.50) at The Library Shop (www.thelibraryshop.org) and in bookstores
nationwide.
Tours
Free public tours of Before Victoria are conducted Tuesday through Saturday at 12:30 and 2:30 p.m. and Sunday at 3:30 p.m. (April 10 � May 22). Groups of ten or more people must make reserved group tour arrangements; call 212-930-0501.
Reserved group tour fees are $7 per person for adults and $5 for senior citizens; there is no charge for full-time students.
Before Victoria: Extraordinary Women of the British Romantic Era will
be on view from April 8 through July 30, 2005 in the D. Samuel and Jeane H.
Gottesman Exhibition Hall of The New York Public Library, Humanities and Social
Sciences Library, Fifth Avenue and 42nd Street. Exhibition hours are Tuesday
and Wednesday, 11 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.; Thursday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to
6 p.m.; Sunday, 1 p.m. to 6 p.m.; closed Mondays, and national holidays. (The
Library will be closed on Sundays after May 22, 2005, through the summer; and
on the Saturdays, May 28 and July 2, 2005). Admission is free. For further
information about exhibitions at The New York Public Library, the public may
call 212-869-8089 or visit the Library’s website at www.nypl.org.
Before Victoria: Extraordinary Women of the British Romantic Era was made
possible in part by The Carl and Lily Pforzheimer Foundation, Inc., and The
New York Public Library’s Carl H. Pforzheimer Collection of Shelley and
His Circle. Support for The New York Public Library’s Exhibitions Program
has been provided by Pinewood Foundation and by Sue and Edgar Wachenheim III.
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Contact: Lindy Regan or Herb Scher at 212.704.8600.