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Painted when British artist Louise Jopling was an ambitious young professional—and pregnant with her son Lindsay, this self-portrait insists on seeing her as a working artist rather than a decorative sitter. She stages herself “through the looking-glass,” riffing on Lewis Carroll’s recent novel to suggest a passage between private and public identities as a woman who sits in her studio and the public painter whose image will hang in exhibitions. 

She depicts herself as a light-skinned woman artist sitting as she paints on an easel with her body turned slightly to the side so her gaze meets ours in a calm, steady look. She wears a pale blue dress with ruffled trim, a high white collar, and a matching blue-and-white cap perched over dark hair. A spray of yellow and russet flowers hangs at her chest, echoed by warm tones in her cheeks. Jopling balances a wooden palette loaded with bright dabs of paint on her lap, a fan of brushes gathered in her right hand as she works at an unseen canvas. We realize we are looking into a tall, dark-framed mirror. Behind her, a red-brown studio wall, a painted folding screen crowded with tiny figures, a yellow chest of drawers, a draped chair, and the vertical bar of her easel describe a lived-in, professional studio space.

Jopling sent this picture to the Society of Lady Artists in 1875, while her companion canvas "A Modern Cinderella" appeared at the Royal Academy, evidence of her determination to claim space in institutions that still excluded women from membership. The folding screen, patterned textiles, and fashionable blue dress signal her place in cosmopolitan Victorian culture, yet the direct gaze, firm posture, and active hands quietly challenge assumptions about women’s roles. Shown in "Now You See Us: Women Artists in Britain 1520–1920," the painting restores Jopling to the story of British art as a pioneer who built an art school for women and helped future generations step through the glass of professional exclusion.

Painted when British artist Louise Jopling was an ambitious young professional—and pregnant with her son Lindsay, this self-portrait insists on seeing her as a working artist rather than a decorative sitter. She stages herself “through the looking-glass,” riffing on Lewis Carroll’s recent novel to suggest a passage between private and public identities as a woman who sits in her studio and the public painter whose image will hang in exhibitions. She depicts herself as a light-skinned woman artist sitting as she paints on an easel with her body turned slightly to the side so her gaze meets ours in a calm, steady look. She wears a pale blue dress with ruffled trim, a high white collar, and a matching blue-and-white cap perched over dark hair. A spray of yellow and russet flowers hangs at her chest, echoed by warm tones in her cheeks. Jopling balances a wooden palette loaded with bright dabs of paint on her lap, a fan of brushes gathered in her right hand as she works at an unseen canvas. We realize we are looking into a tall, dark-framed mirror. Behind her, a red-brown studio wall, a painted folding screen crowded with tiny figures, a yellow chest of drawers, a draped chair, and the vertical bar of her easel describe a lived-in, professional studio space. Jopling sent this picture to the Society of Lady Artists in 1875, while her companion canvas "A Modern Cinderella" appeared at the Royal Academy, evidence of her determination to claim space in institutions that still excluded women from membership. The folding screen, patterned textiles, and fashionable blue dress signal her place in cosmopolitan Victorian culture, yet the direct gaze, firm posture, and active hands quietly challenge assumptions about women’s roles. Shown in "Now You See Us: Women Artists in Britain 1520–1920," the painting restores Jopling to the story of British art as a pioneer who built an art school for women and helped future generations step through the glass of professional exclusion.

“Through the Looking-Glass” by Louise Jopling (English) – Oil paint on canvas / 1875 – Tate Britain (London, England) #WomenInArt #LouiseJopling #Jopling #TateBritain #TateMuseum #VictorianArt #WomensArt #WomanArtist #WomenArtists #art #artText #arte #BlueskyArt #mirror #EnglishArtist #SelfPortrait

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A young woman fills the frame, shown close and front-facing, her gaze from large almond eyes averted while her right hand tightly clamps a small kitten at the neck with white-knuckled tension. Edges are sharply drawn while surfaces appear as cool, enamel-like paint laid with small, deliberate strokes. The kitten stares directly outward with large green almond eyes as the young light-skinned woman turns away, creating a dissonance between contact and detachment. A flat background and meticulous contours heighten the sense of stillness, restraint, and psychological pressure.

Painted in 1947, the model is Kathleen “Kitty” Garman, Freud’s muse and soon-to-be first wife (married in 1948). Daughter of sculptor Jacob Epstein and Kathleen Garman, Kitty was an art student and frequent sitter, appearing in a sequence of Freud’s early portraits. Here the kitten operates as a visual pun on her nickname while also sharpening the picture’s unease: the affectionate symbol is held with a grip that reads as control rather than comfort. 

This painting belongs to Freud’s early, hyper-precise manner with clean outlines, cool tonality, plus steady, linear brushwork and before the looser impasto of his later decades. At this moment, Freud was in his mid-twenties, gaining recognition in postwar London. The painting’s taut pose and withheld glance suggest the artist’s fascination with inner states over mere likeness, capturing a relationship on the cusp of marriage and a career poised to shift in scale and ambition.

A young woman fills the frame, shown close and front-facing, her gaze from large almond eyes averted while her right hand tightly clamps a small kitten at the neck with white-knuckled tension. Edges are sharply drawn while surfaces appear as cool, enamel-like paint laid with small, deliberate strokes. The kitten stares directly outward with large green almond eyes as the young light-skinned woman turns away, creating a dissonance between contact and detachment. A flat background and meticulous contours heighten the sense of stillness, restraint, and psychological pressure. Painted in 1947, the model is Kathleen “Kitty” Garman, Freud’s muse and soon-to-be first wife (married in 1948). Daughter of sculptor Jacob Epstein and Kathleen Garman, Kitty was an art student and frequent sitter, appearing in a sequence of Freud’s early portraits. Here the kitten operates as a visual pun on her nickname while also sharpening the picture’s unease: the affectionate symbol is held with a grip that reads as control rather than comfort. This painting belongs to Freud’s early, hyper-precise manner with clean outlines, cool tonality, plus steady, linear brushwork and before the looser impasto of his later decades. At this moment, Freud was in his mid-twenties, gaining recognition in postwar London. The painting’s taut pose and withheld glance suggest the artist’s fascination with inner states over mere likeness, capturing a relationship on the cusp of marriage and a career poised to shift in scale and ambition.

"Girl with a Kitten" by Lucian Freud (German-born British) - Oil on canvas / 1947 - Tate (London, UK) #WomenInArt #LucianFreud #Freud #KittyGarman #Tate #TateMuseum #BritishArt #PostwarArt #Portraiture #1940sArt #OilOnCanvas #BlueskyArt #painting #PortraitofaGirl #arte #art #ArtText #cats #Symbolism

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A barefoot woman with light-olive skin and voluminous black curls stands on barren ground beneath a darkening sky. Her turquoise dress, embroidered with Persian or Greek warriors and tied with a dark-rose sash, ripples faintly in the warm air. Around her neck twines a small brownish-green snake like living jewelry. Holding a long wand in her right hand, she traces a ring of flame in the sand, enclosing herself and a cauldron that blazes with yellow-white fire. In her left hand, she lifts a crescent-shaped sickle. Smoke rises in a straight, glowing column, undisturbed by wind. Beyond the circle’s light, large black birds and a toad gather as symbols of witchcraft and corruption while inside, white flowers lie scattered beside her bare feet. The rocky desert and dim shapes of distant cliffs intensify her isolation allowing the circle’s glow to define both her boundary and her command.

British artist John William Waterhouse’s fascination with miracles, magic, and prophecy converges here in the figure of an enchantress poised between mystery and mastery. Drawing from Victorian interest in the occult and “Orientalist” imagery, he portrays the beautiful woman not as victim but as autonomous priestess, creating her own sanctified space. The costume’s eclectic mix, from Anglo-Saxon hair to Near Eastern embroidery, reflects the painter’s attraction to imagined exoticism rather than lived travel. The sickle links her to Hecate and lunar cycles while the circle becomes a symbol of protection and creative power. Outside lies a barren world of superstition; within, the woman and her flowers embody beauty and agency. 

When first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1886, “The Magic Circle” captivated audiences with its “original conception and pictorial result.” It remains among Waterhouse’s earliest triumphs, marking the beginning of his lifelong exploration of women as bearers of vision, transformation, and the unknowable.

A barefoot woman with light-olive skin and voluminous black curls stands on barren ground beneath a darkening sky. Her turquoise dress, embroidered with Persian or Greek warriors and tied with a dark-rose sash, ripples faintly in the warm air. Around her neck twines a small brownish-green snake like living jewelry. Holding a long wand in her right hand, she traces a ring of flame in the sand, enclosing herself and a cauldron that blazes with yellow-white fire. In her left hand, she lifts a crescent-shaped sickle. Smoke rises in a straight, glowing column, undisturbed by wind. Beyond the circle’s light, large black birds and a toad gather as symbols of witchcraft and corruption while inside, white flowers lie scattered beside her bare feet. The rocky desert and dim shapes of distant cliffs intensify her isolation allowing the circle’s glow to define both her boundary and her command. British artist John William Waterhouse’s fascination with miracles, magic, and prophecy converges here in the figure of an enchantress poised between mystery and mastery. Drawing from Victorian interest in the occult and “Orientalist” imagery, he portrays the beautiful woman not as victim but as autonomous priestess, creating her own sanctified space. The costume’s eclectic mix, from Anglo-Saxon hair to Near Eastern embroidery, reflects the painter’s attraction to imagined exoticism rather than lived travel. The sickle links her to Hecate and lunar cycles while the circle becomes a symbol of protection and creative power. Outside lies a barren world of superstition; within, the woman and her flowers embody beauty and agency. When first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1886, “The Magic Circle” captivated audiences with its “original conception and pictorial result.” It remains among Waterhouse’s earliest triumphs, marking the beginning of his lifelong exploration of women as bearers of vision, transformation, and the unknowable.

“The Magic Circle” by John William Waterhouse (British) – Oil on canvas / 1886 – Tate Britain (London, UK) #WomenInArt #TateBritain #art #artText #artwork #WitchArt #MagicArt #Blueskyart
#Pre-Raphaelitism #BritishArtist #Orientalism #TateMuseum #Waterhouse #JohnWilliamWaterhouse #Pre-Raphaelite

73 9 4 1
Original post on indieweb.social

I was walking to an appointment by Roger’s Place #YEG. I noticed two people wearing hoodies, with TATE on the back. Isn’t that nice I thought, they must have been to London visiting the Tate Museum. After my appointment I passed gaggles of young women wearing very short skirts and high heels (my […]

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I was there and in hindsight, I have seen how everything was evolving & moving towards the invention of the Internet. Even in my own work.

TATE MODERN EXHIBITION
Electric DreamsArt & Technology before the Internet
youtube.com/watch?v=bl2R...

#Art #ArtExhibition #TateMuseum

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Bild "Untitled" gemalt von Firelei Baéz.

Bild "Untitled" gemalt von Firelei Baéz.

Bild gemalt von Gerhard Richter.

Bild gemalt von Gerhard Richter.

Bild gemalt von Sonja Delauney-Terk.

Bild gemalt von Sonja Delauney-Terk.

Und noch etwas mehr Kunst @Tate London...

#kleineKunstklasse #art #tatemuseum #London

Baez / Richter / Delauney-Terk

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Bild gemalt von Jackson Pollock

Bild gemalt von Jackson Pollock

Bild 'Der Gärtner' gemalt von Paul Cézanne.

Bild 'Der Gärtner' gemalt von Paul Cézanne.

Bild "Gothic Flowers" gemalt von Lee Krasner

Bild "Gothic Flowers" gemalt von Lee Krasner

Bild gemalt von Georges Braque.

Bild gemalt von Georges Braque.

@TateLondon
Ein bisschen Kunst...

Pollock / Cézanne / Krasner / Braque

#kleineKunstklasse
#London #TateMuseum #art #exhibition

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