Stella Bowen's anxious interiors

dc.contributor.authorDowney, G.
dc.contributor.editorSupski, S.
dc.date.issued2006
dc.description.abstractBetween 1922 and 1933 Adelaide-born artist Stella Bowen (1893-1947) lived and worked in Paris. Here she discovered a new subject--the apartment or studio interior, and these paintings of domestic space bear little resemblance to her earlier work. (1) Darker in mood and more disturbing in content than any of her previous paintings, Bowen's interior views constitute the focus of this article. (2) By drawing on theories from feminist film studies that explore the significance of women at windows, and by drawing on stories by Katherine Mansfield I will argue that Bowen's domestic views reflect women's experience of the early modern city as an anxious but potentially charged space for the iteration of self. Reading Bowen's work against the emerging study of 'critical human geography' gives new insight into how colonial expatriates experienced the geographies of the modern city, and re-positions Bowen's painting within an expanded canon of modernism.
dc.description.statementofresponsibilityGeorgina Downey
dc.identifier.citationAustralian Cultural History, 2006; 24:99-113
dc.identifier.issn0728-8433
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2440/106839
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherAustralian Academy of the Humanities and the History of Ideas Unit
dc.rights© 2006 Australian Public Intellectual Network and the author
dc.source.urihttp://www.api-network.com/cgi-bin/ach/ach.cgi
dc.titleStella Bowen's anxious interiors
dc.typeJournal article
pubs.publication-statusPublished

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