1. DangerouslyModern_AGNSW
    Photograph: Supplied | Anna Kucera | 'Dangerously Modern: Australian Women Artists in Europe 1890-1940' © Art Gallery of New South Wales
  2. People looking at a painting in the Art Gallery of NSW
    Photograph: Supplied | Anna Kucera | 'Dangerously Modern: Australian Women Artists in Europe 1890-1940' © Art Gallery of New South Wales
  3. Exhibition at the Art Gallery of NSW
    Photograph: Supplied | Anna Kucera | 'Dangerously Modern: Australian Women Artists in Europe 1890-1940' © Art Gallery of New South Wales

Dangerously Modern: Australian Women Artists in Europe 1890-1940

The Art Gallery of New South Wales spotlights the trailblazing Australian and New Zealand females who made art history at this new exhibition on now
  • Art, Paintings
  • Art Gallery of NSW, Sydney
By Caitlyn Todoroski for Time Out in association with the Art Gallery of New South Wales
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Time Out says

The Art Gallery of New South Wales’ newest exhibition – Dangerously Modern: Australian Women Artists in Europe 1890-1940 – spotlights 50 trailblazing females who were among some of the first to draw attention to the fact that women can make some pretty bloody great art too. 

The speedy rate of industrialisation in the 19th century meant a major shift in European society. Artists used it as a chance to reject traditional themes like religion, and instead focused on fresh ways to portray individuals (in a time where it felt like machines were going to rule the world). Meanwhile, women used it as their ticket to pull a seat up at the table.

The focus of the exhibition is specifically on our very own Australian and New Zealander artists who made the journey to Europe to immerse themselves in the modernist movement. Gallery-goers can peruse works from historic names like Nora Heysen, Margaret Preston and Grace Cossington Smith, and also witness the work of some lesser-known but equally important creatives like CL Allport, Justine Kong Sing and Stella Marks.

Featuring celebrated and rediscovered paintings, prints, drawings, sculpture and ceramics, the exhibition includes work by celebrated artists such as Nora Heysen, Margaret Preston and Grace Cossington Smith, alongside lesser-known but equally compelling figures such as CL Allport, Justine Kong Sing and Stella Marks.

Dangerously Modern’s run in Sydney spans all the way to mid-February so a hot (art) girl summer awaits. You can purchase a ticket here for any time of the week, but we say Wednesday nights are the go – duck in after work with friends and score 2-for-1 exhibition entry.

Dangerously Modern is presented by the Art Gallery of New South Wales in partnership with the Art Gallery of South Australia.

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