It will always be a special field for women, the production of work in the
first place for children, and it is unnecessary to spend time in emphasising or
over-emphasising its importance. Art itself reckons little with motives and much
with results. In a more general view it would, perhaps, be better to start this
small article with some notice of the women painters of the seventeenth,
eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. There is Mrs. Mary Beale, who was a
child when Cromwell was Lord Protector,
oil paintings for sale, and who later on painted a most
excellent portrait of Charles II. There is some work of hers in the National
Portrait Gallery, London, work of the quiet, genuine kind, and better than most
of the painting that came for some time afterwards. Then there is Angelica
Kauffman, R.A., who provides us with perhaps the only well-known name of the
early periods, and there are some portrait-painters of interest, like Miss
Catharine Read, of Reynolds' time,
art oil painting, or like Mrs. Anne Mee, of the early part of
last century. But it must be confessed that it would be a sorry list for a
couple of centuries if it were a fact that women had had the same opportunities
and no greater disabilities than the men of the period. It is not indeed until
we reach such painters as Margaret Carpenter, the portrait painter, Mrs. Matilda
Heming, the landscapist, and Lady Waterford, that more than charming amateur who
might have done so much, that we begin to feel we have a reasonable genesis of
the worker of to-day. These painters show to us now rather the influences of
their time or the limitations of their opportunities, than personalities which
are outside such considerations, but they nevertheless provide us with evidence
of a very genuine and lively activity.
oil painting online
British School, XVIII Century
THE SIBYL.
AFTER THE PICTURE IN THE ROYAL GALLERY,
DRESDEN.
FROM A PHOTOGRAPH BY BRAUN, CLÉMENT & CO., PARIS
Maria
Angelica Kauffman, R.A., Painter
1741-1807
The work of Mrs. Heming is interesting in a rather more special way. It is
distinctly rare to find the ordinary landscapist of her time working with an eye
to truth rather than to the making of a so-called composition of the period,
rare enough in fact to place her quite above the ordinary.
abstract oil paintings
It is at first sight a curious thing that more women painters have not even
in these days been attracted by pure landscape. It is strange in the sense that
they have among them such painters as Lady Butler and Miss Lucy Kemp-Welch. But
no branch of art is more that of the specialists than landscape. It developed
later in history than any other,
modern abstract oil painting, and it calls to those who would tire of the
didactic in human thought and who might find in the study of any obviously human
affair something to remind them of a phase of experience they would, in paint,
avoid. No doubt the Empress Frederick turned to landscape as an occupation of
relief from the pressing human affairs in which her life was involved, and it is
just in such a way that the natural landscapist turns from the human side of
life to the more abstract emotions he finds in the garden of the Great
Spirit.
oil paintings on canvas
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