Tim Good

48%
Flag icon
IN THE WINTER OF 1931, a thirty-year-old painter named Alice Neel was strapped with restraints to a thin mattress in Philadelphia’s orthopedic hospital. Institutionalized by her parents, Neel was raving, incontinent, and suicidal. She would become, arguably, the greatest American portraitist of the twentieth century, but was now forbidden by doctors to draw or make art of any kind.
Broad Strokes: 15 Women Who Made Art and Made History (in That Order)
Rate this book
Clear rating
Open Preview