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Peeling Onions (Lilly Martin Spencer)

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Peeling Onions is an oil painting by American genre painter Lilly Martin Spencer in 1852.[1] Spencer is recognized for her ability to convey the nuance in domestic life with contextual and narrative details. Though the composition of Peeling Onion is easily recognizing as portraits, the meticulous detail and the scenic moment the painter poke fun at suggest the subject operates in and against sentimental culture, which gains her popularity in 1850s.[2]

Peeling Onions (ca. 1852), is a painting of MAG's permanent collection acquired in June, 1988

Description

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Peeling Onions is an oil painting on canvas, measuring 36 by 29 inches. It's a realistic portrayal of woman peeling onions in the dark kitchen, fulfilling daily domestic task.[3] Yet from her pensive facial expression and hesitating gesture, the painting suggest a deeper sorrow of female's household labor, as well as an interrogation about her identity in mid-nineteenth century when the patriarchal ideology of "separate sphere" is dominant.[4]

The painting endorsed a combination of nativist sentiment and European technique derived from seventeenth-century Dutch and Flemish paintings and contemporary works by artists trained at the Dilsseldorf Academy in Germany.[5] The still life in the front presents to the viewer with a sharp glimpse of naturalism, and the trompe l'oeil effect by the protruding spoon indicate painter's study of seventeenth-century Dutch art.[1]

Peeling Onions embodies Lilly Martin Spencer's embrace of domesticity. By introducing dichotomies, such as one eye with tears and the other cover by the hand holding a knife, the demure dress in contrast to the muscular forearms, she allows her work for multiple and contradictory messages.[6]

Background

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Lilly Martin Spencer is a widely recognized female genre painter grew up in Ohio.[7] Her work endorses "domestic feminism," affirms and appreciates female's labor within the household, and their leadership role as well as their dominance in the legitimate sphere.[8] Spencer attempted to elevate female's role within the family by highlighting "the reciprocity, circularity, and family love."[9] She claimed women's place as social guide for men in the social life, as well as their moral superiors.[8]

Peeling Onions mimicked Lilly Martin Spencer's life experience as the family's economic support since her husband abandoned his occupation to support Spencer as her business manager.[10] Her dilemma in finding the balance between her role as an artist, the housewife, and the mother echoed her works in blending the vulnerability in female's domestic work. [11]

Analysis

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According to the art critic Elizabeth L. O’Leary, Peeling Onions contained something beyond the portrait of the woman. By depicting her crying while fulfilling the domestic work, it not only revealed the growth in the awareness of female equality in country's public and professional life, but also how it presents as a challenge to their traditional role in family.[1]

She also noted the woman in Peeling Onions is a portrait of the artist's own maid. From surviving letters of the artist, the message contained indicating these domestic employees during her early years in New York as companionable. They helped her temporarily freed from daily chores so she can work on her paintings, and became the subject of her composition.[1]

Some critics suggested that Spencer's focus on women's activities in the kitchen was a natural result of her experience as a mother.[12] The restrictive standards of behavior for women defined by the "cult of true womanhood" limited even an ambitious female artist. At mid-century, notions of female respectability demanded behavior that made it impossible for a woman to explore the spaces of public culture where male artists took as their themes. Gathering places in which men shared information and entertainment, such as the post office, businesses, saloons, or clubs, were alien territory for middle-class women.[13] Therefore, Lilly Martin Spencer pivot her theme closely with domestic affairs, grounded it with the insight and observation from an insider's perspective, and depicted it with meticulous but sentimental details only a female artist could achieve.

In the later nineteenth-century, the concept of "woman's sphere" gets prevail in popular literature. It equated woman with home and private life with man. Peeling Onions, however, challenged this idea under the female painter's work that though woman in the painting showed vulnerability in her cry, her hands keep on fulfilling the work determined, showed the resolution and power of female labor.[11]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d "Seeing America: painting and sculpture from the collection of the Memorial Art Gallery of the University of Rochester". Choice Reviews Online. 44 (10): 55. 2007-06-01. doi:10.5860/choice.44-5448. ISSN 0009-4978.
  2. ^ Bolton-Smith, Robin; Katz, Wendy Jean (2017-12-12). Spencer, Lilly Martin. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press. p. 108-13.
  3. ^ "MAG Collection - Peeling Onions". magart.rochester.edu. Retrieved 2024-12-12.
  4. ^ Byrne, D. J. (2004). Feminine identities and the structuring of postmodern portraiture (Order No. 3164493). p.36 Available from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global.(305160124). Retrieved from https://www.proquest.com/dissertations-theses/feminine-identities-structuring-postmodern/docview/305160124/se-2
  5. ^ Langa, Helen. 1990. “Lilly Martin Spencer : Genre, Aesthetics, and Gender in the Work of a Mid-Nineteenth Century American Woman Artist.” Athanor / Florida State University, Department of Art History. p.37
  6. ^ Masten, April F. “‘Shake Hands?’ Lilly Martin Spencer and the Politics of Art.” American Quarterly 56, no. 2 (2004): 349. https://doi.org/10.1353/aq.2004.0023.
  7. ^ "Lilly Martin Spencer | Artist Profile". National Museum of Women in the Arts. Retrieved 2024-12-12.
  8. ^ a b Hart, Amy. "Life After Community: The Communitarian Women Who Transformed Nineteenth- Century American Society." Order No. 13896423, University of California, Santa Cruz, 2019. p.102 https://www.proquest.com/dissertations-theses/life-after-community-communitarian-women-who/docview/2299814848/se-2.
  9. ^ David M. Lubin, Picturing a Nation: Art and Social Change in Nineteenth-Century America (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1994), 165.
  10. ^ Hart, Amy. "Life After Community: The Communitarian Women Who Transformed Nineteenth- Century American Society." Order No. 13896423, University of California, Santa Cruz, 2019. p.103 https://www.proquest.com/dissertations-theses/life-after-community-communitarian-women-who/docview/2299814848/se-2.
  11. ^ a b "Seeing America: painting and sculpture from the collection of the Memorial Art Gallery of the University of Rochester". Choice Reviews Online. 44 (10): 57. 2007-06-01. doi:10.5860/choice.44-5448. ISSN 0009-4978.
  12. ^ Recent comments echo the nineteenth-century analysis of authors such as Mrs. Elizabeth Ellet. See Bolton-Smith and Truettner 48: "Because of a fortuitous coincidence in her own circumstances and the public's taste...;" or Taylor 8: "The hand that rocked the cradle held the brush. Contemporary [nineteenth-century) criticism rattly failed to point up the association ...".
  13. ^ Langa, Helen. 1990. “Lilly Martin Spencer : Genre, Aesthetics, and Gender in the Work of a Mid-Nineteenth Century American Woman Artist.” Athanor / Florida State University, Department of Art History. p.38