Girl in Red Tights

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Yearc1948
Mediumoil on canvas
LocationMulberry Hill, Melbourne
Girl in Red Tights
ArtistConstance Stokes
Yearc1948
Mediumoil on canvas
LocationMulberry Hill, Melbourne
Websitecollection.nationaltrust.org.au

Girl in Red Tights (c. 1948) is a painting by Australian artist Constance Stokes. Portraying a standing girl wearing red tights, the painting was exhibited in several shows, including the Commonwealth Jubilee Exhibition in Brisbane in 1951, and Twelve Australian Artists, in London in 1953. The work attracted significant critical acclaim.

Constance Stokes was a figurative painter, influenced by Post-Impressionism, and associated with Australian artist George Bell. In around 1948 she painted a work titled Girl in Red Tights. A standing girl wearing only red tights, Anne Summers recounts the circumstances under which it came to be created: "The idea for this painting had come when, arriving early one Thursday evening for her life session at George Bell's, Stokes caught the model undressing in preparation. The relatively informal and intimate nature of the pose was the result of this unexpected encounter".[1]

Critical reception

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