Madame Davit: Enjoying nature: Botanical illustration from a gender perspective

Àngels Viladomiu, Àngel Romo

Abstract


Suzanne Davit (Paris, 1897–Barcelona, 1973) is little known and studied, despite the relevancy of her legacy to the Catalan botanical illustration of the early and mid-20th century. Great botanists such as Pius Font i Quer greatly valued her unique way of capturing nature. As a woman and an artist who was passionate about nature and who was also scientifically very curious, her representation of plants was different from the typical work of the time. Her innovations are interpreted as an alternative artistic discourse to the dominant patriarchal dialogue and a manifestation of the female touch. Access to unpublished documents – Davit’s correspondence with a friend – has made it possible to reconstruct some of the key aspects of her work, involving the crossroads between the aesthetic exaltation of flowers and a gender perspective.

Keywords


Suzanne Davit; botanical illustration; nature aesthetics; gender perspective; epistolary sorority

Full Text: PDF

DOI: https://doi.org/10.7203/metode.14.25553

References


Dyson, J. (2003). Botanical illustration or flower painting: Sexuality, violence and social discourse. Colloquy, 7. https://www.monash.edu/__data/assets/pdf_file/0005/1768379/dyson.pdf

Font Quer, P. (1958). Botánica pintoresca. Ramón Sopena SA.

Font Quer, P. (1973). Plantas medicinales: El dioscórides renovado. Labor.

Pearsall, W. H. (1949). Autumn colours. Endeavour, 8(3), 157–162.

Puche, C., Puche, C., Romo, À., & Susanna, A. (2007). Una il·lustradora a l’Institut Botànic de Barcelona. http://hdl.handle.net/10261/112038

Sennett, R. (2009). El artesano. Anagrama.


Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.