Ethel Walker - Professional Art Career

Professional Art Career

Walker produced a large body of works from different genres, to include flowers, seascapes, landscapes, and mythical subjects. Walker's influences included in Greek and Renaissance art, as well as Chinese painting and Taoist philosophy. She also took interest in the female form.

Walker is best known for her portraits of the female form, paying particular attention to the detail of the sitters/models expression and individual temperaments. Her obvious, tactical brush strokes obscure unnecessary details, thereby allowing her to emphasize the aspects of the mood of the moment .

In her painting, the The Mauve Dress (circa 1930), for example, the sitter's long heavy dress gives the appearance of weighing her down. The woman sitter rests her elbow on a piece of furniture while resting her face in her hand. The dress seems to sap the life of the sitter, who has a dreamy expression on her face.

Walker was a supporter of the natural female form, often publicly rebuking other women for wearing makeup and heavy clothing that hid their form. Her models were never allowed to wear makeup, lipstick, or nail polish during sittings . She painted a series of work that reflected mythological themes, and several works depicting nude female models.

In one piece, titled Invocation, Walker used 25 female models, all either scantly clad or nude, kneeling around 3 female models who are wearing sheer cloth . Birds are depicted fluttering overhead in the painting. It is considered her most detailed piece .

Walker's works throughout her career seemed to capture the human spirit while celebrating the beauty of the female body. Although no longer considered a major artist in history, the art produced by Walker, who died in London, did have a positive and thought-provoking impact on art as a whole.

Her art is regularly displayed in exhibits at many galleries, most notably The Gatehouse Gallery in Glasgow, Scotland .

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