Who is Gladys Hynes? Show reinstates forgotten artist who once represented Britain at the Venice Biennale
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Who is Gladys Hynes? Show reinstates forgotten artist who once represented Britain at the Venice Biennale
"Gladys Hynes was a protean rebel slaloming through early 20th-century Britain's avant-garde circles, training as a landscape and figure painter and later designing for Omega Workshops."
"Hynes was a supporter of the Catholic Women's Suffrage Society, marched for women's political rights, and painted Surrealist anti-war and anti-capitalist visions during the Second World War."
"Her erasure from art history is a mystery, as she has never been in any exhibition, and only one of her paintings is in a British public collection."
The exhibition 'Gladys Hynes: Radical Lives' at Charleston aims to revive the career of Gladys Hynes, a significant yet overlooked artist. Born in 1888 in India, Hynes trained in Cornwall and London, later becoming involved with the Omega Workshops. She interacted with notable figures like Wyndham Lewis and Ezra Pound, and her work included themes of nationalism and women's rights. Despite her achievements, including representation at the Venice Biennale, her contributions remain largely unrecognized, with only one painting in a public collection.
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