Portrait of a Girl in Grey
About this artwork
This is one of a series of four similar paintings of a woman in a grey-blue cloak looking out to the left. One version belongs to the Yale Centre for British Art in New Haven, another to the Albright Knox Art Gallery in New York State, and another is in the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa. The sitter is unknown, although she appeared in nearly fifty of Gwen John’s paintings – almost half of her paintings of women – between about 1915 and 1925. John mentioned her in letters on a few occasions, but did so dismissively, referring to her as ‘just a neighbor’. The four variants of this painting are almost identical apart from slight differences in the position of the hands. In our version and the Yale version, the woman holds a rosary.
Published September 2021
-
artist:
-
title:Portrait of a Girl in Grey
-
date created:About 1918 - 1923
-
materials:Oil on canvas laid on plywood
-
measurements:Canvas: 67.31 x 48.30 cm; Framed: 90.00 x 71.40 x 10.00 cm
-
object type:
-
credit line:Purchased with assistance from the Henry and Sula Walton Fund and Art Fund (with a contribution from the Wolfson Foundation), 2020
-
accession number:GMA 5648
-
gallery:
Gwen John
Gwen John
Born in Pembrokeshire, Wales, Gwen John was the elder sister of the artist Augustus John. She studied at the Slade School of Fine Art in London and at the Whistler School in Paris, settling there in 1904. John modelled for the sculptor Auguste Rodin and was his mistress for a decade. On becoming a...