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This episode is sponsored by The Great Courses Plus. Get a FREE month of unlimited access to over 9,000 lectures presented by engaging, award-winning experts on everything from art to physics, interior design and world languages. Sign up today at thegreatcoursesplus.com/ART. Rivalries are inherently fascinating, because they typically affect not only the individual rivals themselves, but also a whole ecosystem that can grow up around a rivalry-- spurring it on, and enabling it. Some of the greatest artists in history have engaged in some seriously curious conflicts. What causes these rivalries is fascinating and vast-- is it art and creativity? Is it money and patronage? Or is it simply ego? And are the artists really in conflict with one another, or does it just appear that way, to us, or to their communities? How have rivalries impacted art? Today, we are starting an all-new season of episodes dealing with some of the wildest and most complicated rivalries in art history, beginning with the purported feud between Northern European heavyweights Judith Leyster and Frans Hals. // Please SUBSCRIBE and REVIEW our show on Apple Podcasts! Twitter / Facebook/ Instagram Episode Credits This is the first of three episodes in collaboration with Sartle. Sartle encourages you to see art history differently, and they have a plethora of incredibly fun and informative videos, blog posts, and articles on their website. Production and Editing by Kaboonki. Theme music by Alex Davis. Social media assistance by Emily Crockett. ArtCurious is sponsored by Anchorlight, an interdisciplinary creative space, founded with the intent of fostering artists, designers, and craftspeople at varying stages of their development. Home to artist studios, residency opportunities, and exhibition space Anchorlight encourages mentorship and the cross-pollination of skills among creatives in the Triangle. Additional music credits "Gravity" by Borrtex is licensed under BY-NC 4.0; "Vivace solenne" by Dee Yan-Key is licensed under BY-NC-SA 4.0; "Alternative Facts" by David Hilowitz is licensed under BY-NC 4.0; "Lost Forest" by Julie Maxwell's Piano Music is licensed under BY-ND-4.0; "Storm Passing" by Podington Bear is licensed under BY-NC-3.0; "La tapa del viernes" by Circus Marcus is licensed under BY-NC-3.0; Ad music: "Little Lily Swing" by Tri-Tachyon is licensed under BY 4.0 Links and further resources Special Visions: Profiles of Fifteen Women Artists from the Renaissance to the Present Day, Olga S. Opfell Female Gazes: Seventy-Five Women Artists, Elizabeth Martin and Vivian Meyer Frans Hals Biography, The Leiden Collection website Judith Leyster Biography, National Gallery of Art website Dictionary of Women Artists, edited by Delia Gaze "A Light in the Galaxy," essay by Frima Fox Hofrichter, from Singular Women: Writing the Artist, edited by Kristen Frederickson and Sarah E. Webb Judith Leyster: A Dutch Master in Her World, edited by Pieter Welu and James A. Biesboer Tulipmania: Money, Honor, and Knowledge in the Dutch Golden Age, Anne Goldgar Herstory: Women who Changed the World, Deborah Gore Ohrn The New York Times: "A Career Woman's Short but Sweet Career in the 17th Century" Broad Strokes: 15 Women Who Made Art and Made History (In That Order), Bridget Quinn Judith Leyster, Self-Portrait, 1633 Follower of Frans Hals, Copy of a Self-Portrait by Frans Hals, c. 1650s Frans Hals, Gypsy Girl, 1628 Judith Leyster, Boy Playing the Flute, early 1630s Jan Miense Molenaer, The Duet: A Self-Portrait of the Artist with his Wife, Judith Leyster, Probably Their Marriage Portrait), c. 1636 Judith Leyster, The Proposition. 1631 Judith Leyster, Jolly Toper, 1629 Frans Hals, The Jolly Toper, c. 1628-1630 |