Article
Feminist Review (1995) 50, 89–110. doi:10.1057/fr.1995.24
Irish/woman/artwork: Selective readings
Hilary Robinson lectures in the theory and practice of fine art at the University of Ulster, Belfast. She has written widely on contemporary feminist art and edited Visibly Female: Feminist Art Today (London: Camden Press 1987; New York: Universe Books 1988).
Hilary Robinson
Abstract
This paper concentrates upon particular artworks from Irish women artists. It demonstrates that there are certain themes which recur in their artwork. These include dislocation, particularities about place and contestation around language, all of which are rooted in the lived experience of being Irish, being female and being an artist. At the same time the paper provides readings of this artwork which demonstrate that these experiences are diverse, and that the areas of representation within which the artists are working are socially produced constructs. There is therefore no romantic essentialist category of 'Irish woman artist', but rather the richly interplaying histories, readings and contexts of Irish/woman/artwork.
Keywords:
Irish, woman, artist, artwork, selective readings, representation







