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Back to Historic and Early Modern British Art

Gwen John, Self-Portrait 1902. Tate.

A Room of One's Own 1890–1915

17 rooms in Historic and Early Modern British Art

  • Exiles and Dynasties
  • Court versus Parliament
  • Metropolis
  • The Exhibition Age
  • Troubled Glamour
  • Revolution and Reform
  • William Blake
  • Stubbs and Wallinger
  • Art for the Crowd
  • In Open Air
  • Beauty as Protest
  • Sensation and Style
  • Henri Gaudier-Brzeska
  • A Room of One's Own
  • Modern Times
  • Reality and Dreams
  • International Modern

In the early years of the 20th century, British artists explore new representations of female identity, investigating the changing relationships between men and women in society

The growing fight for women’s suffrage (the right to vote) and conflicts over workers’ rights characterise much of this period in Britain. How women are depicted in art changes, including how women represent themselves. The home is no longer a space where women are confined to domestic roles. Instead, it becomes a place where they can express their identity. Interiors are a key setting for portraits and pictures telling modern narrative stories.

Paris is the centre of the art world in Europe. French art has a great influence on British artists. French Impressionist and Post-Impressionist artists inspire British artists with new forms of realism – experimenting with colour and light while exploring new modern subjects. New ideas of selfhood and sexuality are established. French and British artists move away from the way the female figure is traditionally painted – as a historical or mythological figure, often nude and submissive. Instead, they are portrayed as modern women in contemporary interiors.

The women in this room are shown as workers, artists and mothers. Artists now represent women workers as individuals rather than as background figures. Many of the artists exploring these themes are women. Improved access to art education alongside the forging of collaborative networks, means that women now have an increasing presence in the art world.

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Room 12B

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Lady Edna Clarke Hall, Still Life of a Basket on a Chair  1900

Edna Clarke Hall (née Waugh) was one of the star pupils of the Slade School of Art. The training stressed the importance of vigorous drawing and Hall was known primarily for graphic work, particularly her illustrations to ‘Wuthering Heights’, and she also wrote poetry. This is probably the artist’s only oil painting and was made under the direction of Gwen John. The collection of still-life objects suggests a story.

Gallery label, February 2016

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artworks in A Room of One's Own

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Nina Hamnett, The Landlady  1918

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artworks in A Room of One's Own

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Spencer Gore, North London Girl  c.1911–12

The Camden Town Group held regular gatherings on Saturday afternoons at rooms Sickert had rented in Fitzroy Street. Here patrons were shown new works, given tea and invited to buy paintings. Gore's portrait is of the woman who served the tea on these occasions and kept the rooms tidy. Although perhaps best known for his landscapes, urban scenes and theatre pictures, Gore was a gifted and sensitive portraitist, although he never undertook formal commissions. Here he pays as much attention to the textures, patterns and colours of his sitter's clothes and her surroundings as he does to her face.

Gallery label, September 2004

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artworks in A Room of One's Own

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Ethel Sands, The Chintz Couch  c.1910–1

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Walter Richard Sickert, Ennui  c.1914

The title of this painting means ‘boredom’ in French. Sickert suggests the strained relationship between the figures by their lack of communication. Despite being close together, the man and woman face in opposite directions, staring off into space. They appear almost trapped in their surroundings. The furnishings reinforce the theme, in particular the bell jar containing stuffed birds, suggesting a suffocating environment. Sickert’s works give us no moral or narrative certainty. He leaves it up to us to interpret the image.

Gallery label, August 2020

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Harold Gilman, Madeleine Knox  c.1910–1

This portrait of artist Madeleine Knox gives little away about her profession or character. Instead, the quiet domestic setting, gentle colours and dappled brushwork create a meditative atmosphere. Knox’s thoughtful pose is enigmatic: she fingers her coat but it is unclear whether she has just returned from somewhere, or is about to leave. Gilman died in the post-war influenza epidemic at the age of 43.

Gallery label, October 2020

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Mary McEvoy, Interior: Girl Reading  1901

This picture was shown at the NEAC in 1902. It is clearly influenced by the work of the Dutch Old Masters in both subject and technique.Mary McEvoy was a student at the Slade in the 1890s, taught by Henry Tonks and Fred Brown, who encouraged their pupils to exhibit with the Club. In 1902 she married the artist Ambrose McEvoy. A number of women artists exhibited at the NEAC from about the turn of the century, the selection committee evidently treating their work on an equal basis with that of their male colleagues.

Gallery label, September 1992

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Philip Wilson Steer, Mrs Cyprian Williams and her Two Little Girls  1891

The unusual perspective of this composition, looking down on the subject, was influenced by the work of French artist Edgar Degas and the design of Japanese prints. It is used to convey a sense of claustrophobia and confinement. The wife of an art collector, Helen Cyprian Williams was a successful amateur artist renowned for her distinctive features and volatile temperament. The uneasy shift in scale from Mrs Williams to her daughters – and her gaze away from them, lost in thought – reinforces some undefined sense of separation. Her stillness invites us to speculate about what is running through her mind.

Gallery label, May 2007

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Edouard Vuillard, Girl in an Interior  c.1910

Vuillard was associated with a group of young artists known as the Nabis, whose anti-naturalist, decorative style was influenced by Gauguin. He frequently used friends as models, but he was not a portraitist in a traditional sense. ‘I don’t make portraits’, he once said, ‘I paint people in their homes’. He obsessively studied the everyday objects and furnishings of middle class interiors, and represented his models as they might be seen by a friend or member of their family. The model here is Mme Alfred Savoir, known as Miche, an acquaintance of Vuillard’s friend and dealer, Jos Hessel.

Gallery label, December 2011

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Philip Wilson Steer, Seated Nude: The Black Hat  c.1900

Wilson Steer, one of the most impressionist of British painters, posed his nudes in everyday settings, and here the model is playfully trying on a hat she has found in the studio. Steer did not exhibit this sketch, and it was chosen for the Tate Gallery directly from his studio in 1941, by the then Director Sir John Rothenstein. Steer told him ‘friends told me it was spoiled by the hat; they thought it indecent that a nude should be wearing a hat, so it’s never been shown’.

Gallery label, February 2016

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Pierre Bonnard, Nude Bending Down  1923

A woman is glimpsed quietly wiping her leg. The steadied pose and glowing treatment of the body capture the intimacy of everyday life. Bonnard's model was his companion, Marthe, whose body was regularly at the heart of his paintings and the apparent surreptitiousness may be understood as part of their daily relationship. Although her nakedness suggests sensuality, Marthe's prolonged bathing was linked to a tubercular (or possibly neurotic) condition.

Gallery label, July 2008

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Mabel Nicholson, Family Group  c.1911

Nicholson used her children as models, sometimes in dramatic poses or costumes. Here, she shows them with their nanny in a circular composition completed by a model ship. Some see the figures’ positions as representing gender expectations. Nicholson’s daughter’s pose echoes that of her nanny, perhaps associating her future with a nurturing role. Nicholson maintained her artistic career at a time when a married woman was expected to abandon any ambitions outside of her family. She died in the influenza epidemic in 1918.

Gallery label, October 2020

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Harold Gilman, Mrs Mounter at the Breakfast Table  1916–17

Gilman was a member of the Camden Group of painters whose commitment to the painting of everyday life is typified in this work. Mrs Mounter was the artist’s landlady. He shows her with a blank, perhaps melancholy expression. She seems almost dominated by the very ordinary tea pot, jug and cups which speak, perhaps, of a simple life. Such simplicity in a painting would have seemed radical to audiences used to seeing more lavish subjects.

Gallery label, September 2016

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Gwen John, Chloë Boughton-Leigh  c.1907

Gwen John trained at the Slade School of Art in London. She settled in Paris in 1904, working as a model and immersing herself in the artistic world of the city. She lived in France for the rest of her life, exhibiting on both sides of the Channel. The portrait shown here is of Chloë Boughton-Leigh, a close friend of the artist. It was likely painted in John’s attic room and studio in Paris. The subtle colour scheme, short foreground and her sitter’s informal pose suggest an intimate atmosphere.

Gallery label, January 2019

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Sylvia Pankhurst, Suffrage teaset  1909

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Gwen John, Self-Portrait  1902

Gwen John trained at the Slade School of Art in London from 1895–1898. As a woman in an industry still largely dominated by men, John had to struggle for recognition. It has been suggested that the intense self-scrutiny of this image and her isolation, reflects her experiences as an artist. In recent years, John’s reputation has grown, and she is widely recognised for her intimate portraits and her subtle use of colour.

Gallery label, February 2019

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Walter Richard Sickert, Woman Washing her Hair  1906

Sickert was committed to painting everyday life, and here he shows the woman in circumstances in which she might naturally be naked. This sets her apart from the artistic tradition of female nudes, which were conventionally shown inactive and with little context.Sickert learnt much from the French artist Edgar Degas, including such ‘through the key hole’ views. In this way the woman is shown as if we have glimpsed her without her knowing we are there.This is one of a series of nudes Sickert painted in his studio in Paris in autumn 1906.

Gallery label, May 2007

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Sir William Orpen, The Mirror  1900

The sitter in this portrait is Emily Scoble, a model from the Slade School of Art. Orpen was briefly engaged to her. The room is apparently an accurate portrayal of Orpen’s lodgings, but the shallow pictorial depth and decorative, or ‘aesthetic,’ arrangement of objects is based on Whistler’s famous portrait of his mother in profile. The circular mirror on the wall reflects the artist painting at his easel. This is a device which Orpen borrowed from a 15th-century painting by Jan van Eyck, The Arnolfini Portrait, which he would have seen on display at the National Gallery.

Gallery label, July 2017

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artworks in A Room of One's Own

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Art in this room

T05773: Still Life of a Basket on a Chair
Lady Edna Clarke Hall Still Life of a Basket on a Chair 1900
L04409: The Landlady
Nina Hamnett The Landlady 1918
T00027: North London Girl
Spencer Gore North London Girl c.1911–12
N03845: The Chintz Couch
Ethel Sands The Chintz Couch c.1910–1
N03846: Ennui
Walter Richard Sickert Ennui c.1914
T13024: Madeleine Knox
Harold Gilman Madeleine Knox c.1910–1
N04362: Interior: Girl Reading
Mary McEvoy Interior: Girl Reading 1901
N04422: Mrs Cyprian Williams and her Two Little Girls
Philip Wilson Steer Mrs Cyprian Williams and her Two Little Girls 1891
N04436: Girl in an Interior
Edouard Vuillard Girl in an Interior c.1910
N05261: Seated Nude: The Black Hat
Philip Wilson Steer Seated Nude: The Black Hat c.1900
T01076: Nude Bending Down
Pierre Bonnard Nude Bending Down 1923
T05847: Family Group
Mabel Nicholson Family Group c.1911
N05317: Mrs Mounter at the Breakfast Table
Harold Gilman Mrs Mounter at the Breakfast Table 1916–17
N04088: Chloë Boughton-Leigh
Gwen John Chloë Boughton-Leigh c.1907

Sorry, no image available

Sylvia Pankhurst Suffrage teaset 1909
N05366: Self-Portrait
Gwen John Self-Portrait 1902
N05091: Woman Washing her Hair
Walter Richard Sickert Woman Washing her Hair 1906
N02940: The Mirror
Sir William Orpen The Mirror 1900

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  • Suffrage teaset

    Sylvia Pankhurst
    1909
    On display at Tate Britain part of Historic and Modern British Art
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