Talk
Talk: Victorian Women, Unwed Mothers
27 Sep 2015
Foundling Museum
London, United Kingdom
Free with Museum admission.
An exhibition on the myth and reality of the 'fallen woman' in Victorian Britain, comparing paintings with petitions of real women applying to leave their babies at the Foundling Hospital.
This major exhibition focuses on the myth and reality of the ‘fallen woman’ in Victorian Britain.
In an age when sexual innocence was highly valued and sex for a respectable woman was deemed appropriate only within marriage, the loss of chastity for an unwed woman had multiple repercussions. The figure of the ‘fallen’ woman was popularly portrayed in art, literature and the media as Victorian moralists warned against the consequences of losing one’s virtue.
This exhibition draws together the work of artists including Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Richard Redgrave, George Frederic Watts and Thomas Faed, who considered the subject of the fallen woman in their work and helped propel the myth. In addition, newspaper illustrations and stereoscopes demonstrate how depictions of the fallen woman in popular culture also helped define a woman’s role and limitations within society.
The exhibition also explores the written petitions of women applying to the Foundling Hospital at the time. During the early nineteenth century, London’s Foundling Hospital changed its admission process to focus on restoring respectability to the mother. Only the petitions of previously respectable women bearing their first illegitimate child were considered. A specially-commissioned sound installation by musician and composer Steve Lewinson offers a new and engaging interpretation of the Hospital’s archive and brings the women’s voices to life.
The Fallen Woman is curated by Professor Lynda Nead in collaboration with The Foundling Museum’s curatorial team.
This exhibition received funding through #arthappens, Art Fund and the Heritage Lottery Fund.
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