Jane Maria Bowkett

Jane Maria Bowkett (1837–1891) was a British traditional Victorian genre painter who worked primarily in oils. Her work has been described as 'delightful, slightly naive pictures of women and children, either interiors, or often beach scenes'.[1] She managed, however, to establish a successful career as a professional artist in a male dominated occupation.[2] It has been suggested that in some paintings, she created scenes that were ambiguous by refusing to depict women as models of moral virtue, and depicting mothers and children as being content regardless of a male presence.[3] It is also suggested that the painting Young Lady in a Conservatory makes social commentary on the moral restrictions placed upon women as the subject is seen in a small conservatory with minimal room to move.[4]

  1. ^ Wood, Christopher (1999). Victorian Paintings. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. pp. 320, 326.
  2. ^ Laycock, Kathleen Mary (2006). Out of obscurity: the artist Jane Maria Bowkett (1837-1891). University of Victoria, Canada, MA thesis. hdl:1828/2000.
  3. ^ Smith, Lindsey (1998). "The Politics of Focus: Women, Children, and Nineteenth-century Photography". Manchester University Press – via EBSCO Host.
  4. ^ Novakov, Anna (2017). Imagined Utopias in the Built Environment: From London's Vauxhall Garden to the Black Rock Desert. Cambridge Scholars Publisher.