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The Great Women Artists

Katarina Jerinic on Francesca Woodman

The Great Women Artists

Katy Hessel

Arts

4.8944 Ratings

🗓️ 24 March 2021

⏱️ 48 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In episode 57 of The Great Women Artists Podcast, Katy Hessel interviews the esteemed curator of the Woodman Foundation, Katarina Jerinic on the GROUNDBREAKING photographer, Francesca Woodman!!! [This episode is brought to you by Alighieri jewellery: www.alighieri.co.uk | use the code TGWA at checkout for 10% off!] And WOW is this an incredible insight to the American photographer, who in her short career produced an extraordinary body of work (over 800 photographs) acclaimed for its unique style and range of innovative techniques. Born in Colorado in 1958, at the age of thirteen Francesca Woodman took her first self-portrait. From then, up until her untimely death in 1981, aged just 22, she produced incredibly visceral, expressive, dreamlike and gothic-like photographs. From the beginning: she was both the subject and object in her work.  Fragmenting her body hiding behind furniture, using reflective surfaces such as mirrors to conceal herself, or simply cropping the image, Woodman uses photography to emphasise the isolated body parts of the human figure. Slightly surrealist, her hauntingly narrative, small-scale photographs are almost akin to plays. They are at once theatrical, Baroque and operatic, as well as still and silent. In this incredibly in-depth insight into her career as told by Jerinic, who was close to Francesca's artist parents, Betty and George Woodman, we are given a full appreciation for Woodman's life and work. From growing up in Italy, attending RISD, and her final years in New York.  Since 1986, Woodman's work has been exhibited widely and has been the subject of extensive critical study in the United States and Europe. Woodman is often situated alongside her contemporaries of the late 1970s such as Ana Mendieta and Hannah Wilke, yet her work also foreshadows artists such as Cindy Sherman, Sarah Lucas, Nan Goldin and Karen Finley in their subsequent dialogues with the self and reinterpretations of the female body. ENJOY!! Further links: https://www.woodmanfoundation.org/ WORKS DISCUSSED: Self Portrait, Aged 13, 1972 https://www.woodmanfoundation.org/artworks/self-portrait-at-13 https://www.victoria-miro.com/artists/7-francesca-woodman/ Space 2 Series (Nature Lab), 1975–76 https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2014/aug/31/searching-for-the-real-francesca-woodman#img-2 Space2 Series, 1976 https://www.woodmanfoundation.org/artworks/untitled-13 Polka Dots Series, 1976 https://www.woodmanfoundation.org/artworks/from-polka-dots Angel Series, Rome, Italy, 1977 https://www.woodmanfoundation.org/artworks/from-angel-series Untitled, 1977–78 https://www.woodmanfoundation.org/artworks/untitled-4 Eel Series, Venice, 1978 https://www.woodmanfoundation.org/artworks/from-eel-series Blueprint for a Temple, 1980 https://www.woodmanfoundation.org/artworks/blueprint-for-a-temple Follow us: Katy Hessel: @thegreatwomenartists / @katy.hessel Sound editing by Laura Hendry  Artwork by @thisisaliceskinner Music by Ben Wetherfield https://www.thegreatwomenartists.com/

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello and welcome back to the Great Women Artist podcast. I hope you were all doing well at this time.

0:05.9

I am so delighted to say that today we will be speaking with Katerina Jerenic on the groundbreaking photographer Francesca Woodman.

0:13.2

But before we start, I am so excited to reintroduce our sponsor for this series, the brilliant Alligieri jewelry,

0:19.6

a collection inspired by Dante Allegherie's

0:22.2

Divine Comedy, with each piece corresponding to one of the poet's 100 poems. You can visit

0:27.3

their wonderful work at www.aligieri.com.com. And just for our listeners, they are offering

0:33.2

a 10% discount across all products with the code TGWA at checkout.

0:39.2

Each week, their founder, Rosmittani, will be giving us an insight into Alligieri, and I hope

0:43.9

you enjoy this episode.

0:46.8

It's a really exciting week for us here in the Alligieri studio, because March the 25th,

0:52.1

Mark's National Dante Day, created in celebration of the incredible

0:57.0

poet Dante Ali Gehry, on whom we've based our entire brand.

1:01.5

It's amazing to think that it's been 700 years since the passing of Dante, and yet his

1:06.0

story in the Divine Comedy is just as pertinent for us in 2021.

1:11.6

He writes essentially about a man lost in a dark wood,

1:15.6

trying to make his way through.

1:17.6

It does feel a bit like we might have all been a little bit lost

1:20.6

over the last year.

1:22.6

Here's to looking ahead to the realms of Paradiso

1:25.6

and the light on the horizon.

1:36.7

Hello everyone and welcome to The Great Woman Artist podcast with me, Katie Hessel.

1:42.7

Some of you might know me from The Great Women Artists, an Instagram account I set up in October 2015,

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