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Madeline Green(British, 1884-1947)Two Children in a Stable 91 x 66 cm. (35 3/4 x 26 in.)
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Grace Berry
Associate Specialist
Shipping (UK)
Madeline Green (British, 1884-1947)
signed 'M. GREEN.' (lower right)
oil on canvas
91 x 66 cm. (35 3/4 x 26 in.)
Footnotes
Provenance
Sale; Christie's, London, 16 June 2005, lot 4, where acquired by the present owner
Private Collection, U.K.
Literature
Carole and Peter Walker, Moments in Time: Paintings and Etchings by Madeline Green (1884-1847), Wolds Publishing, U.K., 2011, p.13 (col.ill.)
Carole Walker, Reflections of an Artist: Madeline Green, Wolds Publishing, Devon, 2020, p.101 (col.ill.)
Madeline Green was a British painter celebrated for her figurative works, particularly genre scenes and portraits that captured the nuances of everyday life. Born in London, she trained at the Royal Academy Schools, which by the time she enrolled in 1906 admitted women to all classes on equal terms. She became active in the early twentieth-century art scene and exhibited widely, including at the Royal Academy and the Society of Women Artists, where she was a prominent member.
Green's style combined traditional painterly techniques with a modern sensitivity to character and setting. Her work often focused on women in domestic or social contexts, capturing the subtleties of everyday life with an intensity and attention to detail that was uniquely her own. Based in Ealing for much of her life, she frequently painted herself and her family, initially out of economy but later with an intensity that became a defining aspect of her practice. In these images, she assumed a variety of roles; mother, wife, dancer, costermonger, sinner, or saint, often staring directly at the viewer with a piercing gaze, mouths open as if about to speak.
Many of her subjects are backlit by large windows or open doorways, giving her paintings a luminous, sometimes haunting quality, often underscored by wry humour or a curious detachment. This combination of technical assurance and idiosyncratic imagination found success not only in London but also further afield; exhibiting at the Paris Salon and the Glasgow Institute, where her handling of paint and character drew admiration.
Green's involvement with the Society of Women Artists connected her to a network of peers committed to advancing women's presence in the art world. While she remained somewhat of a loner, the Society provided an important platform for her practice, allowing her to reach wider audiences at a time when women's contributions were still often marginalised.
Though not widely recognized today, Green painted at a pivotal moment for British women artists. Her figurative, introspective works reflect both the subtle social shifts of her era and the evolving roles of women, maintaining a deeply personal and often enigmatic artistic voice.
























