‘Lent to Copy’: Art Rentals in the Age of Jane Austen
Late-Georgian England saw a radical rise in luxury goods for hire. Strategic hires and loans (from silverware to church pews, pianos to pineapples, and jewelry to carriages) increased access to luxury goods—especially for women on the edge of gentility, including authoress Jane Austen and her sister Cassandra. Barchas will share new findings about Georgian art rentals, including what she learned about a London art supplier who lent out prints in the 1790s to amateur artists.
Janine Barchas is the Chancellor’s Council Centennial Chair in the Book Arts at the University of Texas at Austin. She writes about the material culture of the so-called ‘long eighteenth century’, including most recently the award-winning The Lost Books of Jane Austen (2019). Her cross-disciplinary work includes the digital heritage project What Jane Saw and essays for The Washington Post, New York Times, Los Angeles Review of Books, and LitHub.
All welcome-but booking is required.
This page was last updated on 29 June 2024