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  1. readfoyer.com › article › shock-dogShock Dog | Foyer

    16 de mai. de 2024 · Shock Dog. Anne Seymour Damer, Shock Dog (nickname for a dog of the Maltese breed), c. 1782. Carrara marble, 33.3 × 38 × 32.1 cm, 34 kg. Lent by The Metropolitan Musuem of Art, Purchase, Barbara Walters Gift, in honor of Cha Cha, 2014 (2014.568). For women artists before the 19th century, having a marble sculpture practice was all but impossible.

  2. Anne Seymour Damer. 1748–1828. Caroline Campbell, Lady Ailesbury. Marble; 21 × 11 inches · 533 × 279 mm ; Carved in 1789 Inscribed: On the front of the socle ...

  3. 22 de mai. de 2024 · Historian Amanda Vickery explains how Anne Seymour Damer (1749 - 1828) became a sculptor. Suitable for teaching Art and Design and History at Key Stage 3 and Third Level.

  4. Mrs Anne Seymour Damer (1749 - 1828) RA Collection: People and Organisations Sculptor, and author. Active in Britain. Miss Anne Seymour Conway; married Hon. James Damer in 1767; separated in 1774.

  5. Anne Damer was celebrated as Britain’s first woman sculptor who portrayed both animals and people with memorable personal style. Noble-born and highly educated, Damer inscribed the Shock Dog with her name in Greek to recall her art’s classical origins.

  6. Anne Seymour Damer Former Title(s): Hon. Mrs. Seymour Damer. Mrs. Damer "Ditto [a lady], half length" [1773, Royal Academy of Arts, London, exhibition catalogue] Date: 1773 Materials & Techniques: Oil on canvas Dimensions: 49 1/2 x 39 inches (125.7 x 99.1 cm) Credit Line: Yale Center for British Art, Bequest of Mrs. Harry Payne Bingham ...

  7. 2 de jun. de 2014 · Historian Amanda Vickery explains how Anne Seymour Damer (1749-1828) became Britain’s first female sculptor at a time when it was thought wrong for women to study the male form.