Image of the paperback exhibition catalogue

Now You See Us

I finally got around to reading the exhibition catalogue for the recent Tate Britain exhibiton ‘Now You See Us: Women Artists in Britain 1520-1920’, which ran from 16 May to 13 October 2024. I went to see it on its final weekend. The exhibition was expansive, and I spent far too long in the earlier sections, reading all the info panels. Once I got about halfway through I was feeling very tired....

November 26, 2024
Self Portrait, 1885 (oil on canvas) by Morisot, Berthe (1841-95); 61×50 cm; Musee Marmottan Monet, Paris, France

Berthe Morisot

Yesterday, while the coronation parties were meant to be in full force, my republican self went to see the ‘Berthe Morisot: Shaping Impressionism’ exhibition at Dulwich Picture Gallery. I had been reading about Berthe Morisot in my current read, ‘The Story of Art Without Men’, and was pleased to see that there was an exhibition of her work on display locally. It was a small show, with Morisot’s works mainly confined to the mid-1870s to 1880s, alongside works by other artists who apparently were an influence on her work....

May 8, 2023
Lotte Laserstein, Self Portrait with a Cat, 1928 ©Leicester Museums & Galleries/Bridgeman Images/TT Photo: ©Leicester Museums & Galleries/Bridgeman Images/TT  Bildupphovsrätt 2023

Lotte Laserstein

There is a new exhibition in Malmo called ‘Lotte Laserstein: A Divided Life’ which features Laserstein’s paintings from both her Berlin and Sweden eras. This is unusual as her later Swedish work is usually not featured – somehow it’s seen as less ‘important’. Laserstein fled Germany at the start of the war as she was part Jewish. Obviously the upheaval of moving from what was a burgeoning successful career in Berlin to having to start again in Sweden where Laserstein didn’t know anyone, would have had a tremendous impact on her work, and I was interested to see her Swedish works....

May 7, 2023