A woman lies on a sofa

Behind Closed Doors: Art and the Self from 1850 to the Present Day

Available on campus OR Online

Spring Term

On Campus: Tuesday 12 January to Tuesday 16 March 2027

OR

Online: Wednesday 20 January to Wednesday 24 March 2027

 

From the middle of the 19th century a key motif emerges in art and literature: the intimate connection between the interior as an actual space and the idea of the ‘inner life’. In our lecture series, we will explore this connection and look at the wide-ranging representation of interior space as a lens through which to understand the evolution of modern consciousness.

We begin in nineteenth-century France, where writers Edmond and Jules de Goncourt and J.K. Huysmans developed the concept of a ‘retreat to the interior’, in which the domestic sphere became a sanctuary from the upheavals of modern life: industrialisation, urbanisation, global conflict and shifting social norms. Women artists like Mary Cassatt and Berthe Morisot had no need to retreat from the public world, to which they were hardly permitted; the social life of the home was in fact one of the few sanctioned subjects of their art.  Within these boundaries, however, they mapped the interior as a varied psychological terrain ranging from safe haven to gilded cage. At the furthest end of that scale, in Ibsen’s contemporaneous A Doll’s House, the image of the miniature domestic interior perfectly evokes the oppressive infantilisation of Nora as wife and mother.

The idea of the domestic environment as metaphor for the self is further developed by artists and writers associated with the Symbolist movement.  We will encounter both the ‘Intimist’ scenes of quiet domestic life in paintings by Édouard Vuillard and Pierre Bonnard and the more unsettling visions of Belgian Symbolists like Fernand Khnopff and Léon Spilliaert, whose depictions of shadowy, muted, or starkly lit interiors mirror their protagonists’ lonely, uneasy minds.

We will trace how such ideas migrated across the Atlantic through texts and artworks by Henry James, John Singer Sargent and James McNeill Whistler.   As we move into the twentieth century, we first turn to the Bloomsbury Group, whose explorations of interior life and domestic space express an alternative vision of modernism, quite different from the more militant, ‘masculine’ energies of European avant-garde movements like Vorticism and Futurism.

We then consider Surrealism’s vivid excavation of the inner mind across painting and film, before turning to the work of Paula Rego, as a further distinctive lens on interior space as a site of memory, desire and disquiet.  Our lecture series coincides with an exhibition of Rego’s work at the Courtauld Gallery, Paula Rego: Dog Woman (5 February – 23 May 2027).

Today, artists around the world continue to explore the domestic interior as both psychic space and physical refuge, and we conclude our series in conversation with contemporary painter Frances Featherstone.

Speakers: Dr Rose Pickering, Dr Will Atkin, Dr Wendy Hitchmough, Dr Elena Crippa, Frances Featherstone.

Moderator: Dr Anne Puetz

 

Booking for our 2026-2027 Showcasing Programme opens at the end of July 2026

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