Pictures of People
Alice Neel’s American Portrait Gallery
Pamela Allara


Brandeis University Press
University Press of New England

2000 • 374 pp. 201 illus. (18 color). 6 x 9"
Art / Biography & Letters / American Studies / Women's Studies

$29.95 Paper, 1-58465-036-2


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A vibrant chronicle of the life and work of a prolific painter and bohemian eccentric.

In this generously illustrated and vibrant chronicle of the life and work of prolific painter and bohemian eccentric Alice Neel, Pamela Allara shows how portraits from a career spanning the 1920s to the 1970s constitute a virtual gallery of American cultural history. While some of Neel's portraits graced the covers of publications like Ms. and Time, most of her subjects were unknowns -- the marginalized, the disenfranchised, the oppressed.

"Every person is a new universe unique with its own laws," Neel once said, but these arresting images of Greenwich Village intelligentsia, of Latinos and Latinas from Spanish Harlem, of gay and lesbian writers and artists, also evoke a profound, if disquieting, sense of time and place. Neel, informed by left-wing politics and avant-garde modernism, infused portraiture with a new energy and relevance, rescuing her sitters for history and rendering them witnesses to their time.


PAMELA ALLARA is Associate Professor of Modern and Contemporary Art in the Fine Arts Department at Brandeis University. Author of exhibition catalogs and curator of exhibits on a variety of subjects, her articles have appeared in such publications as American Art, Art New England, and ARTnews.








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