ABSTRACT

Reading life writing that runs from Tracey Emin, Faith Ringgold and Judy Chicago to Marie Bashkirtseff, Benvenuto Cellini and beyond, Artists and Their Autobiographies from Today to the Renaissance and Back investigates the intriguing doubled truths of artists’ autobiographies: truth in life and truth in art; authorial truth/s and the truth of their art as they saw it. However, this book focuses specifically on the truth of sincerity, which here—following classic discussions by Reindert Dhondt, Philippe Lejeune and Lionel Trilling—appears as a truth to self that floats free from facts to link avowal and feeling. From there, this volume merges autobiography studies with a history of ideas approach to art to trace sincerity’s constancy and variability across times and cultures. Through this pre-disciplinary dialogue, this book shows that recent and historical artists’ autobiographies differ in how, not if, they intertwine sincerity in life and art. Along the way, this volume leverages the foregrounding of sincerity caused by this doubling to explore such key issues of autobiography studies as autobiography’s relation to fiction, serial autobiography, "as-told-to" narrative and what happens when liars claim to tell all.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

How to Use This Book

chapter 1|15 pages

Putting the “Lie” in “Line”

Eric Hebborn'sDrawn to Trouble

chapter 2|12 pages

Who Killed Greta Bismarck

Autobiography, Autofiction and the Authentically Insincere

chapter 4|15 pages

Bitter Whimsy

Saul Steinberg's Reflections and Shadows

chapter 5|15 pages

Explicit Metaphor

Judy Chicago's Self-Refashioning

chapter 6|11 pages

From Art to Life

Faith Ringgold's Flights of Imagination

chapter 7|14 pages

Crossing Borders

Leonora Carrington, Autopathography and the Porous Self

chapter 8|14 pages

Why Have There Been No Great Women Artist-Autobiographers

Marie Bashkirtseff and the Irony of the Self

chapter 9|15 pages

Life Writing, Imperialism, Collage

Mary Delany'sAutobiography and Correspondence

chapter 10|21 pages

False Starts

Cellini, Hogarth, Diderot… and Back Again