The Veil (Indifference)
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Caroline Wogan Durieux (aka Caroline Durieux)
American, 1896–1989
Louisiana lithographer Caroline Durieux's subjects were largely genteel white Southerners, depicted with overtones of gentle mockery and satire. Her faces were caricature-like, with features that convey smug, snobbish attitudes that she associated with the social elite. This lithograph is rendered in the spare, linear style that was one of her standard approaches. The figure is a portrayal of disdain, mocking those who personified a reactionary desire to maintain distinctions in social class at all costs.
American, 1896–1989
The Veil (Indifference)
1939
Object Type:
Print
Creation Place:
North America, American, Louisiana
Dimensions:
10 3/8 in. x 8 3/8 in. (26.35 cm x 21.27 cm)
Medium and Support:
Lithograph on paper
Accession Number:
1981.0014
Credit Line:
Gift of Mary Katherine A. Blount
Louisiana lithographer Caroline Durieux's subjects were largely genteel white Southerners, depicted with overtones of gentle mockery and satire. Her faces were caricature-like, with features that convey smug, snobbish attitudes that she associated with the social elite. This lithograph is rendered in the spare, linear style that was one of her standard approaches. The figure is a portrayal of disdain, mocking those who personified a reactionary desire to maintain distinctions in social class at all costs.
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