Reviews
"Ruth Butler has an important story to tell-one that transfixes, with its portraits of the sometimes sad and always straitened lives of three great artists'' muses, and transports, with its vivid scenes of atelier life in Paris and beyond. This is a book full of promise, packed with new research, new ideas and striking images, and with a brilliant future."-Megan Marshall , The Peabody Sisters: Three Women Who Ignited American Romanticism, �Ruth Butler has produced an astonishing book about a virtually unknown story within this overly rehearsed moment in art history. This is a monumental achievement.��Paul Tucker, author of The Impressionists at Argenteuil and Monet in the 20th Century, "This book is fascinating from start to finish. Butler has undertaken a daunting challenge in resurrecting the lives of three women who were virtually lost in the shadows of the men whose lives they shared, Czanne, Monet, and Rodin. Her research opens doors into the problematic circumstances of women partnered with "genius."- June Hargrove, University of Maryland at College Park, "Ruth Butler has an important story to tell-one that transfixes, with its portraits of the sometimes sad and always straitened lives of three great artists' muses, and transports, with its vivid scenes of atelier life in Paris and beyond. This is a book full of promise, packed with new research, new ideas and striking images, and with a brilliant future."-Megan Marshall , The Peabody Sisters: Three Women Who Ignited American Romanticism, "Both art lovers and scholars will enjoy this heavily researched book. The narrative is suspenseful and sometimes even shocking. . . . Recommended."-Choice, "With gracious writing and scholarly thoroughness, Butler engages in a very personal search for Hortense, Camille and Rose and brings the three model-wives out of their dense obscurity."-Wayne Andersen, author of Manet: The Picnic and the Prostitute, "Ruth Butler has produced an astonishing book about a virtually unknown story within this overly rehearsed moment in art history. This is a monumental achievement."-Paul Tucker, author of The Impressionists at Argenteuil and Monet in the 20th Century, "Ruth Butler has an important story to tell�one that transfixes, with its portraits of the sometimes sad and always straitened lives of three great artists' muses, and transports, with its vivid scenes of atelier life in Paris and beyond. This is a book full of promise, packed with new research, new ideas and striking images, and with a brilliant future."�Megan Marshall, The Peabody Sisters: Three Women Who Ignited American Romanticism, "Ruth Butler has produced an astonishing book about a virtually unknown story within this overly rehearsed moment in art history. This is a monumental achievement."-Paul Tucker, author ofThe Impressionists at ArgenteuilandMonet in the 20th Century, "Masterfully researched. . . . As this book makes amply evident, these women''s lives, no matter how difficult, painful, or uncertain, were never boring. Butler has shown that the silent muse is a compelling subject in her own right."Kate Christensen,Wilson Quarterly, "Vividly brought to life. We come away with a fuller understanding of what it took to be a revolutionary painter or sculptor, and what it meant to be a woman, in late-19th-century France."-Ann Landi, ARTnews, 0;Ruth Butler has produced an astonishing book about a virtually unknown story within this overly rehearsed moment in art history. This is a monumental achievement.1;2;Paul Tucker, author of "The Impressionists at Argenteuil" and "Monet in the 20th Century" -- Paul Tucker, "This book is fascinating from start to finish. Butler has undertaken a daunting challenge in resurrecting the lives of three women who were virtually lost in the shadows of the men whose lives they shared, Cézanne, Monet, and Rodin. Her research opens doors into the problematic circumstances of women partnered with "genius."- June Hargrove, University of Maryland at College Park, "Both art lovers and scholars will enjoy this heavily researched book. The narrative is suspenseful and sometimes even shocking. . . . Recommended."�Choice, "With gracious writing and scholarly thoroughness, Butler engages in a very personal search for Hortense, Camille and Rose and brings the three model-wives out of their dense obscurity."-Wayne Andersen, author of Manet: The Picnic and the Prostitute , "Masterfully researched. . . . As this book makes amply evident, these women's lives, no matter how difficult, painful, or uncertain, were never boring. Butler has shown that the silent muse is a compelling subject in her own right."�Kate Christensen, Wilson Quarterly, "Masterfully researched. . . . As this book makes amply evident, these women's lives, no matter how difficult, painful, or uncertain, were never boring. Butler has shown that the silent muse is a compelling subject in her own right."-Kate Christensen, Wilson Quarterly, "This book is fascinating from start to finish. Butler has undertaken a daunting challenge in resurrecting the lives of three women who were virtually lost in the shadows of the men whose lives they shared, C�zanne, Monet, and Rodin. Her research opens doors into the problematic circumstances of women partnered with "genius."- June Hargrove, University of Maryland at College Park, "Vividly brought to life. We come away with a fuller understanding of what it took to be a revolutionary painter or sculptor, and what it meant to be a woman, in late-19th-century France."-Ann Landi,ARTnews, "Masterfully researched. . . . As this book makes amply evident, these women''s lives, no matter how difficult, painful, or uncertain, were never boring. Butler has shown that the silent muse is a compelling subject in her own right."-Kate Christensen, Wilson Quarterly, "Ruth Butler has an important story to tell--one that transfixes, with its portraits of the sometimes sad and always straitened lives of three great artists'' muses, and transports, with its vivid scenes of atelier life in Paris and beyond. This is a book full of promise, packed with new research, new ideas and striking images, and with a brilliant future."--Megan Marshall," The Peabody Sisters: Three Women Who Ignited American Romanticism", "This book is fascinating from start to finish. Butler has undertaken a daunting challenge in resurrecting the lives of three women who were virtually lost in the shadows of the men whose lives they shared, C�zanne, Monet, and Rodin. Her research opens doors into the problematic circumstances of women partnered with "genius."� June Hargrove, University of Maryland at College Park, "Both art lovers and scholars will enjoy this heavily researched book. The narrative is suspenseful and sometimes even shocking. . . . Recommended."- Choice, �With gracious writing and scholarly thoroughness, Butler engages in a very personal search for Hortense, Camille and Rose and brings the three model-wives out of their dense obscurity.��Wayne Andersen, author of Manet: The Picnic and the Prostitute, "Vividly brought to life. We come away with a fuller understanding of what it took to be a revolutionary painter or sculptor, and what it meant to be a woman, in late-19th-century France."�Ann Landi, ARTnews