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    • Rosa Bonheur Paintings, Bio, Ideas | TheArtStory
      • Rosa Bonheur is an early example of a feminist. She lived entirely independently, with no need of any financial support beyond her own living made from painting. Groundbreaking for the time, Bonheur was openly a lesbian, living for her whole life with another woman.
      www.theartstory.org/artist/bonheur-rosa/
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  2. Rosa Bonheur is an early example of a feminist. She lived entirely independently, with no need of any financial support beyond her own living made from painting. Groundbreaking for the time, Bonheur was openly a lesbian, living for her whole life with another woman.

    • French
    • March 16, 1822
    • Bordeaux, Gironde, France
    • May 25, 1899
  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Rosa_BonheurRosa Bonheur - Wikipedia

    Rosa Bonheur did all three. Bonheur never explicitly said she was a lesbian, but her lifestyle and the way she talked about her female partners suggest this. [36] From 1800 until 2013, women in Paris, France were technically forbidden from wearing trousers without permission from police, with only a few exceptions.

  4. Aug 22, 2024 · One of the most famous and financially successful French female artists in the 19th century, Rosa Bonheur, was a significant contributor to the animal painting genre and to the role of women in society and art.

  5. Apr 13, 2020 · Bonheur was undoubtedly a highly successful woman, but if she was a feminist, she was a first-wave, or choice, feminist. She rejected any preferential treatment of women, arguing instead that...

  6. Oct 17, 2022 · And she did big paintings ‌‌— of horses, stags, lions — not small flowers, in pastels. That is feminist.” But Bonheur did not want to be a symbol for other women or for women’s rights.

  7. Now hailed as a feminist, their international success helped pave the way for women artists across the world to take up work as respected professionals. In their relationships, Bonheur referred to themselves as ‘the husband’ and assumed the traditionally male role of ‘breadwinner’.

  8. A realistic painter of animals, she became the richest and most famous female artist of 19th-century France, burnishing her reputation with savvy self-promotion and an eccentric personal life. In the 20th century, she was forgotten.

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