English, asked by joysehgal8661, 6 months ago

Whats is the authors point of view about women's contribution to art

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Answered by arunabalamohapatra
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ANSWER :)

Marcel was socially very adapted. Elsa was noticed by extravagant public Dada actions (e.g. walking in the streets of New York, wearing two tin cans instead of a bra) and was even referred to as a citizen of terror!

Marcel was socially very adapted. Elsa was noticed by extravagant public Dada actions (e.g. walking in the streets of New York, wearing two tin cans instead of a bra) and was even referred to as a citizen of terror!One should not lose sight of the fact that Marcel Duchamp was not only financially supported by his father, but also enjoyed the generous support of the wealthy art collector couple Arensberg. Elsa, on the other hand, lived in poverty most of the time, washing in public fountains in Philadelphia, sleeping on park benches, stealing to survive, and even being imprisoned.

Marcel was socially very adapted. Elsa was noticed by extravagant public Dada actions (e.g. walking in the streets of New York, wearing two tin cans instead of a bra) and was even referred to as a citizen of terror!One should not lose sight of the fact that Marcel Duchamp was not only financially supported by his father, but also enjoyed the generous support of the wealthy art collector couple Arensberg. Elsa, on the other hand, lived in poverty most of the time, washing in public fountains in Philadelphia, sleeping on park benches, stealing to survive, and even being imprisoned.When she was back in Berlin, she survived by selling newspapers on the Kurfürstendamm. There she met by chance another artist who purchased some of her sculptures, which are now in New York. She often begged for some money from friends. Whether the open gas tap, which led to her death in Paris, was an accident, is questionable.

Marcel was socially very adapted. Elsa was noticed by extravagant public Dada actions (e.g. walking in the streets of New York, wearing two tin cans instead of a bra) and was even referred to as a citizen of terror!One should not lose sight of the fact that Marcel Duchamp was not only financially supported by his father, but also enjoyed the generous support of the wealthy art collector couple Arensberg. Elsa, on the other hand, lived in poverty most of the time, washing in public fountains in Philadelphia, sleeping on park benches, stealing to survive, and even being imprisoned.When she was back in Berlin, she survived by selling newspapers on the Kurfürstendamm. There she met by chance another artist who purchased some of her sculptures, which are now in New York. She often begged for some money from friends. Whether the open gas tap, which led to her death in Paris, was an accident, is questionable.Reading books on this subject, written by Amelia Jones, Irene Gammel, Glyn Thompson, and why not mine, should perhaps become compulsory for cats. ;-)

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