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PAST EXHIBITION ARCHIVE
Off the Beaten Track
Three Centuries of Women Travellers
Sponsored by

7 July - 31 October 2004
Admission free
Porter Gallery

Dame Freya Stark
by Herbert Olivier, 1923

Lady Maria Callcott
by Sir Thomas Lawrence,
1819
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Women travellers of the past
three centuries have amazing and varied tales to tell. Some of
them were exceptional individuals who broke all the rules, while
others travelled as dutiful wives, mothers or daughters. Journeying
to distant parts of the world from the 1660s to the 1960s, before
the age of mass travel, these women had experiences and encounters
almost unthinkable today.
Victorian traveller Mary Kingsley
defended herself with a canoe paddle when a crocodile attempted
to board her boat, and was saved only by the thickness of her
skirt when she later fell into a pit of sharp stakes. Penelope
Chetwode made a remarkable river crossing in India using the
traditional method of floating across on an inflated animal hide,
propelled by a local man on top of whom she was required to lie.
Meanwhile Lady Hester Stanhope offered advice to respectable
women on answering calls of nature whilst in the desert - one
should take a chamber pot, a small tent, declare a coffee break,
pitch the tent and gracefully retire.
This exhibition brings together
60 portraits, in all media, from the National Portrait Gallery's
collections, alongside photographs and paintings made by the
women on their travels. It also features some of their finest
souvenirs, now prized exhibits in major museums and private collections
across Britain. The exhibition is organised geographically and
ends with a selection of the world's women who made Britain the
destination for their travels, recording their presence here
by visiting a fashionable society photographer.
Travellers to the Americas include
Maria Callcott who travelled in Brazil in the 1820s. The exhibition
presents a fine portrait of her by Sir Thomas Lawrence, and the
album of botanical illustrations that she painted there. Fanny
Kemble, the famous actress, had a very different experience of
the United States when she discovered that her American husband's
money came from his slave plantations in Georgia. The marriage
swiftly fell apart and her journal describing the plight of his
slaves was published to further the cause of Abolition.
Well known twentieth-century
women travellers, Gertrude Bell and Freya Stark, both travelled
in the Middle East and Arabia. Both were superb travel writers
and took photographs. Freya Stark's images of southern Yemen
are displayed in the exhibition and are particularly beautiful.
Bell lived in Baghdad, founding the Museum there, having been
closely involved in the political and geographical decisions
that created the modern state of Iraq. In the previous century,
Jane Digby also chose to live in the Middle East. After a stormy
divorce and many love affairs she found her final husband in
Syria, a Bedouin Sheikh young enough to be her son, and joined
his tribe in the deserts around the ruined city of Palmyra, shown
here in one of her watercolours.
Travellers to Africa include
Amelia Edwards whose 1877 book, A Thousand Miles up the Nile,
earned her enough to pay for archaeological excavations in Egypt.
An Egyptian portrait sculpture that belonged to her is displayed
in the exhibition, as is a marble sculpture of her. Also in this
section are a selection of Mary Kingsley's artefacts - a metre-high
Congolese nail figure, a newly-discovered fish which was named
after her, and the brown fur hat that she wore during her African
journeys.
From the Far East and the Pacific
come photographs of China taken in the 1890s by Isabella Bird
on her journey up the Yangtze. She converted the cabin of her
boat into a darkroom, washing the chemicals off her glass plate
negatives in the river itself. In contrast, Annie Brassey chose
to travel in a luxury yacht The Sunbeam, collecting masks
and other Pacific ethnographic items.
Women who made Britain their
destination include Pocohontas, the American Indian woman who
visited the court of King James I, Queen Emma of Hawaii who stayed
with Queen Victoria, Sarah Davies, a young African slave who
became Queen Victoria's goddaughter and Nehru's sister Mrs Vijaya
Lakshmi Pandit who was India's High Commissioner to Britain and
the first woman President of the United Nations.
The exhibition is curated by
Clare Gittings, Education Officer at the National Portrait Gallery
and curator of Escape to Eden: Five Centuries of Women and
Gardens (2000).
Publication
A fully-illustrated book by Dea
Birkett, with a foreword by Jan Morris, accompanies the exhibition.
Off the Beaten Track: Three Centuries of Women Travellers
is published by the National Portrait Gallery in July 2004, price
£18.99 (hardback).
Other related product available from
the Gallery's online shop
Study Day
There will be a study
day at the National Portrait Gallery on 25 September 2004, organised
in partnership with the Association for the Study of Travel in
Egypt and the Near East (ASTENE). Speakers will include Dea Birkett,
Dr Caroline Bressey, Susanna Hoe and Sarah Searight. For further
information please contact education@npg.org.uk.
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