Sirens & Muses
by Antonia Angress
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Description
"The lives of four artists are forever altered by the desires, protests, and ambitions that lure and unsettle them in this magnetic novel. It's 2011: America is in a deep recession and Occupy Wall Street is escalating. But at the elite Wrynn College of Art, students paint and sculpt in a rarified bubble, dreaming only of disproving the notion that in art, everything has already been done. Louisa Arceneaux is a thoughtful, observant nineteen-year-old when she transfers to Wrynn as a show more scholarship student, but she soon finds herself adrift in an environment that prizes novelty over beauty. Complicating matters is Louisa's unexpected attraction to her charismatic roommate, Karina Piontek, the preternaturally gifted but mercurial daughter of wealthy art collectors. Gradually, Louisa and Karina are drawn into an intense sensual and artistic relationship, one that forces them to confront their deepest desires and fears. But Karina also can't shake her fascination with Preston Utley, a senior and anti-capitalist Internet provocateur publicly feuding with visiting professor and political painter Robert Belfer-a once-controversial figurehead seeking to regain cultural relevance, and perhaps a spotlight. When Preston concocts an explosive hoax, the fates of all four artists are upended as each is unexpectedly thrust into the cutthroat New York art world. Now, all must struggle to find new identities in art, in society, and amongst each other. In the process, they must find either their most authentic terms of life-of success, failure, and joy-or risk losing themselves altogether. With mesmerizing grace and earnest beauty, Sirens & Muses wrestles with questions of selfhood and ambition, art and protest, and new love. At the same time, with a canny, critical eye, the novel upends notions of class, money, art, youth, and a generation's fight to own their future"-- show lessTags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
This book blew me away; I wish I could keep reading it. Angress has captured so much soul, so much truth, in her characters and their messy, flawed journeys through the art world. I cannot believe this is the author's debut novel; every sentence is carefully, deliberately written, and these characters possess a rare liveliness, an authenticity, that shocked and endeared me. Their yearning, their hopes, their foils, their fears are all perfectly captured, perfectly painted. My own words fail to describe just how much I loved this musing, challenging, soft, curious novel.
Art is not usually something I relate to, as much as I want to be an art person. This book is all about art and artists but I actually really enjoyed it. The characters are great, and the academic side and then the social/business side of the art world were fascinating. Very well written and engaging.
"Was this what life, real life, actually was, just a maze of forking paths and missed opportunities."
I totally picked up this book for the gorgeous cover, not knowing what it was about. What I got was a truly interesting story about art, the lengths people go to create and own it, desire, longing, and lots and lots of loneliness.
I thoroughly enjoyed it the story and was invested in the relationships among all the artists, however I did feel like it lacked... something? I don't know that something is, but I'll let you know when I figure it out. Overall I do recommend reading this book. It includes a slice of history involving Occupy Wall Street which I found very interesting and will be looking into more.
I totally picked up this book for the gorgeous cover, not knowing what it was about. What I got was a truly interesting story about art, the lengths people go to create and own it, desire, longing, and lots and lots of loneliness.
I thoroughly enjoyed it the story and was invested in the relationships among all the artists, however I did feel like it lacked... something? I don't know that something is, but I'll let you know when I figure it out. Overall I do recommend reading this book. It includes a slice of history involving Occupy Wall Street which I found very interesting and will be looking into more.
Interesting book but hard to review. It’s not that I particularly disliked anything, but there wasn’t anything I particularly liked, either. The descriptions of the art were fascinating and educational, revealing just what varied forms art can take and something of the thought and physical process of the artist creating it, and I wish I could see some of that art actually created. The history and movements and protests that have taken place in the name of art were also interesting and at times eye-opening.
But even though Sirens & Muses has lots of big words, big dramatic words, and lots of big personalities and drama to go with the big words, the story just kind of goes round and round and at the end everyone is more or less where show more and who they were to begin with. Life in the art world, even in art school, seems to be totally devoid of joy. Instead it’s competitive, cutthroat, pretentious, snobbish and money- and class-conscious. Those who “get” art “deserve” it and everyone else is beneath notice. There’s a hierarchy, a community with high walls and unwritten rules and lines that must not be crossed. As presented, an artist’s life is stressful and uncertain from beginning to end and you must be dedicated and driven to put yourself into it and stay there.
The characters are of course all artists and connections criss-cross in their small world: students, educators, past successes, current failures, family histories. All but a couple of them have something in their past that contributes to their current, often reprehensible, behavior, but their issues are mostly stereotypical and these surface-only characters don’t elicit much sympathy or sense of understanding from the reader.
The narrative moves from person to person and place to place telling everyone’s story and ends somewhat vaguely hopeful for some of them. I didn’t need complete closure or happy endings for all, but I do wish I could have been more engaged in the characters’ lives so that I would care. Thanks to Penguin Random House for providing an advance copy via NetGalley for my honest review. I believe I was sent the ARC because I enjoyed Ghosts of Harvard. Sirens & Muses does have a little of the college vibe and the undercurrent of what goes on, but the art world is much different, and although it is well-written Sirens & Muses lacks the strong character depth and exciting plot of Ghosts of Harvard. All opinions are my own. show less
But even though Sirens & Muses has lots of big words, big dramatic words, and lots of big personalities and drama to go with the big words, the story just kind of goes round and round and at the end everyone is more or less where show more and who they were to begin with. Life in the art world, even in art school, seems to be totally devoid of joy. Instead it’s competitive, cutthroat, pretentious, snobbish and money- and class-conscious. Those who “get” art “deserve” it and everyone else is beneath notice. There’s a hierarchy, a community with high walls and unwritten rules and lines that must not be crossed. As presented, an artist’s life is stressful and uncertain from beginning to end and you must be dedicated and driven to put yourself into it and stay there.
The characters are of course all artists and connections criss-cross in their small world: students, educators, past successes, current failures, family histories. All but a couple of them have something in their past that contributes to their current, often reprehensible, behavior, but their issues are mostly stereotypical and these surface-only characters don’t elicit much sympathy or sense of understanding from the reader.
The narrative moves from person to person and place to place telling everyone’s story and ends somewhat vaguely hopeful for some of them. I didn’t need complete closure or happy endings for all, but I do wish I could have been more engaged in the characters’ lives so that I would care. Thanks to Penguin Random House for providing an advance copy via NetGalley for my honest review. I believe I was sent the ARC because I enjoyed Ghosts of Harvard. Sirens & Muses does have a little of the college vibe and the undercurrent of what goes on, but the art world is much different, and although it is well-written Sirens & Muses lacks the strong character depth and exciting plot of Ghosts of Harvard. All opinions are my own. show less
The story moves with part one being the backdrop and first layers of a larger painting. Each person being a muse to another person’s life and meaning. Part two is the final touches we see the light reaching inner lives and our characters begin to become themselves without having to deal with the pressures of parents, or the art world. Each finds a resolution to their own story. In a way, it felt very touching, and I was pleased by the way the book ended. A resolution with room for another story or another painting.
I am not sure I've ever before been so devestated at the end of a novel, not because of HOW the story ended, but because it ended at all.
About rich kids who smell like white privilege with mummy/daddy issues - (except for louisa)
I find I just dont care about the elitist art scene
I find I just dont care about the elitist art scene
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Sirens & Muses
- Original publication date
- 2022-07-12
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- Members
- 267
- Popularity
- 121,417
- Reviews
- 15
- Rating
- (3.99)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 5
- ASINs
- 2


























































