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Drusilla Modjeska: ‘How easy it is that we can live in the sunshine and not see the shadow’

In her new book, the Australian author of Exiles at Home and Stravinsky’s Lunch returns to examine how female artists have fought for creative freedomGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailDrusilla Modjeska looks small in her favourite leather chair, sitting beneath a photographic self-portrait of her friend, the artist Julie Rrap. A recent gift from the artist, the poster-size image shows Rrap’s face and bare shoulders, topped by the back of her own head and shoulders worn as a surreal hat. Her eyes meet ours – confident, amused and slightly challenging.Rrap, who reversed her patronymic name Parr as an act of feminist subversion, was one of Modjeska’s companions and guides to the early 20th-century female artists she brings to the fore in her new book, A Woman’s Eye, Her Art, a group biography that weaves art history with world wars and social change through contemporary eyes. It is a work of passion and scholarship about “seeing and being seen”, Modjeska says.Sign up for our rundown of must-reads, pop culture and tips for the weekend, every Saturday morning Continue reading...

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