It will be all about women in the new issue of Windows on Art On Paper.


The next issue of Windows on Art On Paper, due out in March, will be dedicated to women and women's issues. In the debate section, experts will answer a question: is art criticism dead?

A new issue of Windows on Art On Paper is coming out, which will have a new format and be entirely dedicated to women. The magazine’s new format will include the entry of two new columns, “In the Spotlight,” which will analyze artists who are the subject of recent exhibitions or rediscoveries, and “Out of the Spotlight,” which, in contrast, will talk about artists who are famous and less famous but currently not close to the attention of the general public. What’s more, there will be as many as nine pages devoted to travel, with thematic paths that will obviously feature art as a protagonist.

Among the topics the issue will discuss: women’s presences in artistic literature between the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries with an article by one of the foremost experts on the subject, art historian Adelina Modesti; a survey of the production of one of the greatest contemporary artists known for her feminist practice, namely Monica Bonvicini (by Tristana Chinni); an article on a great artist of the past, Lavinia Fontana, to whom the dedicated the cover (by Ilaria Baratta); a journey through the works of a young international promise, Swiss Rebekka Steiger, born in 1993 (by Michela Bassanello); an article to rediscover a forgotten 19th-century artist, Fulvia Bisi (by Elena Lissoni); and the frescoes of San Maurizio al Monastero Maggiore in Milan, which are very much related to female themes (by Francesca Gigli).

For columns that are not part of the in-depth monograph, we will discuss the young Donatello with Giorgio Dellacasa, Jenny Saville with Anna De Fazio Siciliano, Cecco di Pietro with Federico Giannini, and Ennio Morlotti with Jacopo Suggi. As for the traditional debate, the next issue gathers many experts who will answer one question: is art criticism dead? You can read contributions from Renato Barilli, Luca Bochicchio, Federica Bueti, Beatrice Buscaroli, Daniele Capra, Vittoria Coen, Ludovico Pratesi, Matteo Galbiati, and Luca Zuccala, among others.

You can purchase your subscription to four issues of the magazine by Feb. 20 at a cost of only 29.90 euros(here is the link to subscribe), plus postage, which varies according to location: with the subscription, you will receive the magazine starting in March, for one year. Each issue consists of 176 pages, bound in an elegant paperback, with twelve to thirteen articles by art historians, critics, young and established journalists, and very rich and detailed illustrations. For those who do not wish to subscribe, there is the option of purchasing a single copy for only 9.90 euros, plus shipping(here is the link to reserve your copy, again by February 20).

La copertina di Finestre sull'Arte On Paper 13
The cover of Windows on Art On Paper 13

It will be all about women in the new issue of Windows on Art On Paper.
It will be all about women in the new issue of Windows on Art On Paper.


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