Open every day from 10am to 5pm
Artwork
Roger Fry

Portrait of a Woman Reading

1886-1934

Portrait of a Woman Reading

Artwork Information

The sitter in this sketch is unidentified, but bears a strong resemblance to Vanessa Bell, with whom Roger Fry had an affair, although it could also be her sister Virginia Woolf. The relaxed pose of the subject, who, engrossed in her book, absentmindedly places her fingers on her right forearm beneath her sleeve, suggests an intimacy between sitter and portraitist.

Known as a critic and curator, as well as a painter, Fry espoused the belief that artists should ‘give up the idea of imitative likeness and aim at the creation of absolute necessitated form.’ His later works, however, do not always adhere to this ideal, but as Frances Spalding observes, ‘they are often richer in human value. They reveal an intelligence and lack of rhetoric that gives them a freshness and immediacy of effect.’ (Intimate Portraits, 2005)

Artist
Roger Fry
Title
Portrait of a Woman Reading
Production Date
1886-1934
Medium
pen and ink
Dimensions
219 x 171 mm
Credit Line
Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, gift of Mr Ian Johnson, 1976
Accession No
1976/41/2
Copyright
No known copyright restrictions
Department
International Art
Display Status
Not on display

More by Roger Fry (3)

View All
Landscape with Boats

Landscape with Boats

1886-1934

Artwork
Portrait of a Woman Reading

Portrait of a Woman Reading

1886-1934

Artwork
Glade with Trees and Path

Glade with Trees and Path

1886-1934

Artwork
Explore Connections (10)
Portraits

Portraits

1483 Artworks

Life drawings

Life drawings

63 Artworks

Women

Women

1863 Artworks

Side views

Side views

153 Artworks

Profiles (figures)

Profiles (figures)

154 Artworks