Paula Rego’s Celebration of Women and Workers


19 July 2023
Paula Rego’s Celebration of Women and Workers 1
Paula Rego, Crivelli's Garden III (1990–1991). Acrylic on canvas. 189.9 x 240.9 x 2 cm. © Ostrich Arts Ltd. Courtesy the National Gallery, London.
Paula Rego’s Celebration of Women and Workers 2
Paula Rego, Crivelli's Garden IV (1990–1991). Acrylic on canvas. 190 x 260.7 x 2 cm. © Ostrich Arts Ltd. Courtesy the National Gallery, London.
Paula Rego’s Celebration of Women and Workers 3
Carlo Crivelli, La Madonna della Rondine (The Madonna of the Swallow) (1490). Egg and oil on poplar. 197.5 x 185 x 21 cm. © The National Gallery. Courtesy the National Gallery, London.
Paula Rego’s Celebration of Women and Workers 4
Paula Rego, Study for Crivelli's Garden (1990–1991). Pencil on paper. 42 x 30 cm. © Ostrich Arts Ltd. Courtesy Ostrich Arts Ltd and Victoria Miro, London.
Paula Rego’s Celebration of Women and Workers 5
Paula Rego, Study for Crivelli's Garden (1990–1991). Pen, ink and watercolour on paper. 29.5 x 42 cm. © Ostrich Arts Ltd. Courtesy Ostrich Arts Ltd and Victoria Miro, London.
Paula Rego’s Celebration of Women and Workers 6
Paula Rego, Crivelli's Garden II (1990–1991). Acrylic on canvas. 189.9 x 401 x 2 cm. © Ostrich Arts Ltd. Courtesy the National Gallery, London.
Paula Rego’s Celebration of Women and Workers 7
Paula Rego in her studio with Crivelli's Garden (1990). © Ostrich Arts Ltd. Courtesy the National Gallery, London.

Paula Rego's (1935–2022) monumental painting, Crivelli's Garden (1990–1991), has been liberated from the National Gallery dining room and given its own space in Room 46 of the London art museum.

Inspired by a viewing of La Madonna della Rondine (The Madonna of the Swallow) (1490), a majestic altarpiece by Italian painter Carlo Crivelli, Rego decided to paint her own garden to celebrate the stories of women.

For inspiration, she looked to historical narratives of women in biblical history and stories of women in her own life.

Rego's ten-metre-long painting depicts the Virgin Mary, Saint Catherine, and Mary Magdalene alongside family, friends, and National Gallery staff whom she met while working as the gallery's first Associate Artist between 1990 and 1992.

It is interesting to see how Rego's work disregards scale—we see giant female saints towering above tiny nuns and petite, courageous young women. Though some subjects are purposely larger, each subject holds our attention with its depiction of dramatic and mysterious narratives.

The painting also celebrates her homeland, Portugal. The garden scenery conveys the façades of Lisbon and Ericeira (where Rego grew up) with decorative blue and white azulejo tiles, which are deeply embedded in the country's history and culture.

An incredibly layered work, Rego's masterpiece reveals more with each viewing. The exhibition, Crivelli's Garden (20 July–29 October 2023), is a rare opportunity to see the work alongside Crivelli's original altarpiece and Rego's life drawings and studies. ⁠


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