To ward off the gloom of these dark December days, I’m taking a look at a painter whose work simply celebrates the joy of life. Joan Gillchrest moved to Mousehole from London in 1958. She was able to buy a cottage overlooking the harbour by selling a sapphire ring and sable coat that she had inherited.
Short articles exploring women artists in Cornwall, both past and present.
Monday, December 20, 2010
Monday, December 6, 2010
The Art of Cornwall ~ BBC4 Thursday 2 December 2010
A personal journey from Cambridge to Cornwall underpinned the structure of last week’s 90-minute programme presented by Dr James Fox. Visiting Kettle’s Yard as an undergraduate, he became aware for the first time of the works of Ben Nicholson, Christopher Wood and Alfred Wallis. This experience engendered a fascination for the art of Cornwall.
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Marjorie Williams at Falmouth Art Gallery
This gem of a gallery in the centre of Falmouth hosts a variety of seasonal exhibitions on themes reflecting Cornwall’s cultural connections with the wider world. Its archive yields some surprising treasures, which include a substantial body of work by an artist little known outside Cornwall.
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Helene Schjerfbeck ~ An Interrupted Narrative
‘Cornwall is the most beautiful place I have ever seen’ - a letter home
The unique quality of sunlight in St Ives Bay has long been an enticement to artists. In the nineteenth century, painters from all over Europe who wished to adopt the ‘plein air’ fashion found that Cornwall’s mild climate enabled them to work out of doors for longer than anywhere else in Britain. But it was primarily companionship which brought the Finnish painter Helene Schjerfbeck to St Ives.
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
Sea Change ~ Art in St Ives 1914-1930
A review of the Penlee House Autumn 2010 Exhibition,
focussing on works by selected women artists
focussing on works by selected women artists
The approach to Penlee House is, to me, always accompanied by a lifting of the spirits. This elegant Victorian building, set well back from a busy road, offers a friendly welcome to the footsore visitor. The surrounding parkland is framed by tall trees enclosing a profusion of exotic plants reminiscent of the Abbey Gardens on the Isles of Scilly. The Art Gallery is home to the major collection of Newlyn School paintings (see ‘An Historical Perspective’).
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Lamorna Arts Festival 2010 ~ Open Studios
A look at the work of three women artists: Judith Kerr, Basma Ashworth and Margret Steigner
Perched at a dizzying height above the tiny harbour, Flagstaff Cottage was the focus of many social gatherings enjoyed by artists living in Lamorna in the early years of the twentieth century. Today the house is little changed, and remains the family home of the descendants of Samuel (Lamorna) Birch, the painter who one hundred years ago was instrumental in attracting artists, writers and intellectuals to the valley.
Friday, September 17, 2010
Laura Knight ~ Representations of Women
The early life of the painter Laura Knight was dominated by adversity and overshadowed by tragedy. Her father abandoned the family shortly before Laura’s birth in 1877, leaving her mother struggling to support three young daughters. Both her sisters were sickly, and when Laura was 12 her middle sister died. Two years later her mother died from cancer, and she found herself having to provide for herself and her remaining sibling. Laura somehow took over her mother’s job as an art teacher, convincing the authorities that she was older than she was.
Thursday, September 16, 2010
An historical perspective
‘Michelangelo had no baby’s bottle or teapot hanging round his neck’
~ Dame Laura KnightWomen artists of the twenty-first century seem to have it all. Two examples which spring to mind are Tracey Emin flaunting her promiscuity in textiles, and Louise Bourgeois (with whom Emin collaborated towards the end of the latter’s life) – maker of disturbing soft sculptures which grew out of the emotional pain inflicted by her father’s infidelity. This early experience cast a shadow over her French childhood, and shaped the tone of Bourgeois’ output. By the time of her recent death, she had achieved acclaim both in the USA, where she had lived since 1938, and internationally. However, it was not until late in life that Bourgeois achieved recognition as an artist in her own right. Until then she was known primarily as the wife of a prominent American art historian.
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