Francesca Alexander, “Charity” (1861), oil on canvas (© 1985 Sotheby’s Inc; photograph courtesy Sotheby’s Inc.)
English artwork critic John Ruskin as soon as wrote that she possessed “a quite heavenly gift of genius in a kind I had never before seen”; American diplomat John Lothrop Motley known as her a “person of unquestionable genius.” As we speak, Francesca Alexander will not be well-known, however within the late 1800s, her artworks and acts of charity had been celebrated on either side of the Atlantic. Historian Jacqueline Marie Musacchio’s considerate biography The Artwork and Lifetime of Francesca Alexander 1837–1917 (2025) brings the artist’s story out of the shadows and illuminates the fascinating cross-cultural context through which she labored.
Like Alexander herself, her drawings, work, and books have a quiet subtlety that captures an American lady’s insider view of Tuscany within the late nineteenth century, when each Italy and the world had been on the precipice of nice change. Born in Boston in 1837 as the one baby of a well-to-do household, her father was a profitable portrait painter who doubtless helped foster his daughter’s inventive expertise, although she by no means acquired formal coaching. When Alexander was 16 years outdated, the household relocated to Florence, Italy. Musacchio emphasizes the notable variations between the Alexanders and different prosperous American expatriates dwelling in Italy on the time: Whereas a lot of their friends remained in English-speaking enclaves and held classist and anti-Catholic views, the Alexanders spoke fluent Italian and maintained shut ties with Italians of all stripes, from political and cultural elites to these scuffling with poverty.
Francesca Alexander, “Cinderella” (picture courtesy Wellesley Faculty Particular Collections)
This latter group was particularly vital to Alexander. Pals and guests typically commented on her distinctive relationships with the Italian contadini, or peasants, who had been the artist’s mates and fashions. Musacchio shrewdly anticipates the reader’s skepticism, writing that “today her activities might be seen as indicative of a savior complex” however insisting “her empathy was genuine and her charity was essential for those who received it.” For many years, Alexander drew portraits of those people, wrote intensive biographies of them, and recorded their conventional tales and songs. Alexander’s first main publication, The Story of Ida (1883), associated the life and early loss of life of a younger seamstress good friend, whereas her longtime friendship with the people improvisatrice singer Beatrice di Pian degli Ontani impressed Tuscan Songs, an expansive bilingual songbook with drawings and musical notations. She solicited donations from rich mates overseas and used gross sales from her artworks and publications to supply cash, meals, clothes, medication, and different requirements to these round her in want. Musacchio clarifies all through the e book that though Alexander took her eventual fame in her stride, it was by no means her aim.
Musacchio’s vital eye is very essential in rendering the position of Ruskin, who approached Alexander with what she calls an “almost predatory enthusiasm.” Ruskin turned infatuated with Alexander after their first assembly in Florence in 1882, and his promotion and publication of her work sparked her rise to fame in each the US and the UK. Musacchio particulars the problematics of Ruskin’s strategies: He made excessive edits and elisions to her work, refused to pay her any proceeds from the sale of her books, and referred to her in letters and lectures as a “girl” even supposing she was 45 years outdated after they met.
Probably the most pleasurable elements of the e book is an excerpt from an 1883 letter to a good friend concerning the hordes of curious and generally impolite individuals who flooded into Alexander’s studio after Ruskin’s attentions. On this snippet, the artist — who by no means married or left her mother and father’ dwelling — reveals herself to be witty and intelligent, defying those that mischaracterized her as childlike and inexperienced.
By the point of her loss of life in 1917, Modernism was taking maintain in European artwork and World Warfare I used to be taking its toll. Alexander’s delicate figurative drawings and elite expatriate lifestyle had been now not in model. “Francesca says we have outlived our world, and belong to another century,” her long-lived mom wrote in a 1906 letter. Nonetheless, the artist made her personal humble mark. As she famous in her preface to Tuscan Songs, “I have done my best to save a little of what is passing away.”
Francesca Alexander, title web page for La Sorellaccia (1877), photogravure (picture courtesy Wellesley Faculty Particular Collections)
Francesca Alexander, “Saint Agnese” (1861), ink on paper (picture courtesy Wellesley Faculty Particular Collections)
Cowl of The Artwork and Lifetime of Francesca Alexander 1837–1917 by Jacqueline Marie Musacchio (Lund Humphries, 2025)
The Artwork and Lifetime of Francesca Alexander 1837–1917 (2025) by Jacqueline Marie Musacchio is revealed by Lund Humphries Publishers and is offered on-line and thru unbiased booksellers.