Women's Palette 1900 - 1950

24 December 2022 till 10 April 2023

Exhibition

Women’s Palette presents the ground-breaking work of twenty four Dutch women artists who lived and worked in the vanguard of modern art during the first half of the past century. Over a hundred works by, among others, Charley Toorop, Lou Loeber, Else Berg, Jacoba van Heemskerck, and Charlotte van Pallandt will come together at the Kunsthal. What binds these artists is that they were all ambitious and talented women with a penchant for innovation. The exhibition not only sheds light on their work, but also on their lives, showing what choices they had to make and which opportunities and obstacles they encountered on their paths.

The exhibition places the work of these artists in the context of its time and shows the (im)possibilities they had to deal with in a male-dominated artworld. Women were only allowed to attend art academies from 1871, and it would take another twenty-five years after that before they were also allowed to paint after nude models. Despite the restrictions, many women still managed to carve out a niche for themselves in the company of their male colleagues. Charlotte van Pallandt, for instance, was one of the first women artists to focus on sculpture and is now regarded as one of the leading Dutch sculptors of the twentieth century. And Lotti van der Gaag was a fully-fledged member of the Cobra movement, even though this was only acknowledged many years later.

Deviating from the norm 

The artists in Women’s Palette were all part of the Dutch avant-garde and focused on experimental, new movements like expressionism, cubism and Cobra. Through their artistic work and professional careers they challenged the prevalent idea that women were only able to paint ‘charming’ subjects, like landscapes and still lives, as a pastime. The paintings by Jacoba van Heemskerck and Pau Wijnman, for instance, consist of colourful, abstract shapes from which visible reality has all but disappeared. And Charlotte van Pallandt’s powerfully sculpted heads and Lotti van der Gaag’s sculptures – characterised by cut-away shapes and fantastical names – also demonstrate that the artists deviated from the norm. For many of these artists, social injustice was a recurring theme. Charley Toorop and Anneke van der Feer, for instance, captured the tough lives of working class people in their art, while Nola Hatterman focused on the emancipation of Black people.

Freedom 

Many of the artists featured in the exhibition travelled abroad, for instance to Paris, where they experienced more freedom than in the Netherlands. There they made new contacts and had more opportunity to experiment with new styles. For many women, however, it was difficult to combine their career as a professional artist with having a family. They were forced to make clear choices when it came to having relationships, and many of them therefore made a conscious decision to remain unmarried, childless, or to get a divorce. “It always boils down to that: the struggle between love and work. It is almost impossible to have both,” said Charley Toorop.

Collaboration 

Earlier this year Museum de Wieger in Deurne and Museum Dr8888 in Drachten organised a double exhibition and alternately showed a selection of the works featured in Women’s Palette. For the very first time, the exhibition will now be shown in its entirety at Kunsthal Rotterdam

Kunsthal Rotterdam

Major Cultural Institution

The Kunsthal Rotterdam, founded in 1992 and located on the Westzeedijk, is a prominent cultural institution in the Netherlands, known for its dynamic and surprising programme. With more than twenty exhibitions per year, the Kunsthal offers a wide range of cultural experiences, from classical masters to modern art, design, photography, and more. The building itself, an architectural highlight designed by Rem Koolhaas, comprises more than 3,300 m² of exhibit...

Periodieke tijden

Tuesday 10:00 - 17:00
Wednesday 10:00 - 17:00
Thursday 10:00 - 17:00
Friday 10:00 - 17:00
Saturday 10:00 - 17:00
Sunday 10:00 - 17:00