Painted on Bardsey Island, where Chamberlain settled in 1947, this domestic scene portrays one of her island neighbors holding the artist’s own cat for an image of companionship and rural self-reliance after the upheavals of World War II. The work won the Gold Medal for Fine Art at the National Eisteddfod in 1951, the first time the prize was awarded; she won again in 1953 with The Cristin Children. A young woman sits in three-quarter view, shoulders turned left, cradling a Siamese cat whose dark mask and ears contrast with its pale, fine coat. Her head tilts slightly, eyes and the cat’s gaze aligned toward something beyond the frame to our right, lending the moment a poised stillness. Daylight washes the room while an open window behind them reveals rolling hills and clear sky. Her long dark hair is neatly pulled back. The woman's plain, close-fitting top reads as everyday wear rather than costume. Contours are firm but gentle, color kept naturalistic, so touch and attention become the picture’s quiet drama. Trained at the Royal Academy Schools and co-founder of the Caseg Press, Chamberlain was also a writer. Her Bardsey years shaped both her painting and later prose (like Tide-Race). Here, her skill turns a modest island interior into a portrait of community, place, and care.
"Girl with a Siamese Cat" by Brenda Chamberlain (Welsh) – Oil on canvas / 1951 – Amgueddfa Cymru – Museum Wales (National Museum Cardiff) #WomenInArt #art #artText #artwork #BrendaChamberlain #WelshArt #BritishArt #cat #BlueskyArt #NationalMuseumCardiff #AmgueddfaCymru #WomanArtist #WomenArtists
Born Henriette Theodora Markovitch, French photographer and painter Dora Maar has often been overshadowed by her former lover — Pablo Picasso. Maar was at the centre of the Surrealist movement and exhibited work alongside many leading male artists. Her documentary and commercial photographic practice later evolved into experimental, provocative and surreal painting and photocollage. Like her fellow Surrealists, Maar's work explored psychology, dreams, and the subconscious. After Picasso entered her life in 1936, her artistic production moved away from photomontage and towards painting. It has been noted that Maar's artistic production slowed down after entering into a relationship with Picasso as he dissuaded her from taking photographs, potentially because he was threatened by her talent. Maar was depicted in multiple paintings by different artists including Picasso's famous 1937 Cubist portrait “Weeping Woman.” In hindsight, it appears to be a reflection of the turbulent and abusive relationship between Maar and Picasso, which ended after nine years. Maar later described that period as the “worst time of my life” and experienced depression and a mental decline in the years following the breakup. After their separation, Maar would declare: “All (Picasso's) portraits of me are lies... not one is Dora Maar.” Around the same time that Maar slipped into obscurity following her split from Picasso, she abandoned her artistic pursuits. In 1952, Welsh artist Brenda Chamberlain completed this portrait of Maar. Painted when Maar had become a recluse, Chamberlain's portrait perhaps captures her solitary life. Sitting in an elaborate reddish-brown chair, with a high, curved back and ornate, swirling armrests, she appears as a pensive woman in a white short-sleeved dress, with a plate of dark purple eggplants resting on a pink-ish table beside her, creating a still-life portrait imbued with a contemplative atmosphere.
“Dora Maar – Intérieur Provençal” by Brenda Chamberlain (Welsh) - Oil on canvas / 1952 - Glynn Vivian Art Gallery (Swansea, Wales) #WomenInArt #WomanArtist #art #WomensArt #DoraMaar #FemaleArtist #ArtText #BrendaChamberlain #artwork #GlynnVivianArtGallery #WomenPaintingWomen #PortraitofaWoman
Brenda Chamberlain (British/Welsh, 1912 - 1971) • Still Life with Fish • 1952 • Bangor University, Bangor, Wales
#art #arthistory #womanartist #BrendaChamberlain #20thCenturyBritishArt #stilllife #oilpainting #midcenturyart #femaleartist #painting #painter