My research examines the output of over 150 female artists who contributed to the 'poster movement' in Britain (1919 and 1939). Challenging the conventionally male-focused nature of Art History I explore how these women used the alternative medium of the poster to achieve artistic notoriety and consider how this connected to the changing social, political, and cultural position of women during the interwar. My research focuses specifically on women's work for major companies and bodies, including the government's Empire Marketing Board campaign and the General Post Office's publicity drive. This allows me to explore both the impact of women on the visual culture of the interwar period and the relationship between poster work and the wider g...
As with much in women's history, even recent events in our past have been rendered invisible by male...
Book chapter from a conference paper given in Zaragoza in September 2021. This chapter looks at the ...
This paper examines the role of women in window display in Britain during the 1920s and 1930s. Windo...
The chapter investigates the relationship between London underground, graphic design and female cons...
This thesis recuperates women’s photographic production in late-nineteenth- and early-twentieth-cent...
This article examines women artists’ relationships with collectors and patrons in England between th...
Alicia Foster’s article “Gwen John’s Self-Portrait: Art, Identity and Women Students at the Slade Sc...
This presentation will address how propaganda altered the gender role of women in Great Britain duri...
The women's suffrage movement engaged with art in many different ways, enabling campaigners to expre...
This collection of new essays recovers and explores a neglected archive of women’s print media and d...
Starting with a critique of existing methodologies and histories of the period, this book examines t...
The thesis provides a revaluation of the art of Australian women artists in the period 1900-1940. I...
The thesis investigates the Glasgow Society of Lady Artists (GSLA) as a multi-faceted and multi-gene...
This preliminary study of the critical reaction to the work of women practitioners in the decorative...
This paper will reUect a summer\u27s work with Dr. Jessy Ohl at the University of Alabama, digitizin...
As with much in women's history, even recent events in our past have been rendered invisible by male...
Book chapter from a conference paper given in Zaragoza in September 2021. This chapter looks at the ...
This paper examines the role of women in window display in Britain during the 1920s and 1930s. Windo...
The chapter investigates the relationship between London underground, graphic design and female cons...
This thesis recuperates women’s photographic production in late-nineteenth- and early-twentieth-cent...
This article examines women artists’ relationships with collectors and patrons in England between th...
Alicia Foster’s article “Gwen John’s Self-Portrait: Art, Identity and Women Students at the Slade Sc...
This presentation will address how propaganda altered the gender role of women in Great Britain duri...
The women's suffrage movement engaged with art in many different ways, enabling campaigners to expre...
This collection of new essays recovers and explores a neglected archive of women’s print media and d...
Starting with a critique of existing methodologies and histories of the period, this book examines t...
The thesis provides a revaluation of the art of Australian women artists in the period 1900-1940. I...
The thesis investigates the Glasgow Society of Lady Artists (GSLA) as a multi-faceted and multi-gene...
This preliminary study of the critical reaction to the work of women practitioners in the decorative...
This paper will reUect a summer\u27s work with Dr. Jessy Ohl at the University of Alabama, digitizin...
As with much in women's history, even recent events in our past have been rendered invisible by male...
Book chapter from a conference paper given in Zaragoza in September 2021. This chapter looks at the ...
This paper examines the role of women in window display in Britain during the 1920s and 1930s. Windo...