
 
 Hover over the painting to magnify (there may be an initial delay while the magnified image is loaded)
Hover over the painting to magnify (there may be an initial delay while the magnified image is loaded)Edith Rimmington (1902 - 1986):
The Museum II, 1953 
    Framed (ref: 10586)
Watercolour, gouache, pen and ink on paper
See all works by Edith Rimmington gouache pen and ink watercolour women
Provenance: Gifted by the artist to present owner
Exhibited: Dreamers Awake, White Cube Bermondsey, 28 June 2017 – 17 September 2017.
Literature: Llewellyn, Sacha, et al. Women Only Works on Paper. Liss Llewellyn, 2021, p. 74.
Museum I and Museum II are exceptional works in Edith Rimmington’s artistic production, in the sense that she never made works exceeding a 50 x 70 cm format. The pair were made following an exhibition of regalia that Rimmington saw in London in 1953, the year of the Queen’s Coronation, which gave her the idea of a counter-celebration of monarchy, with subtle ironic undertones. The King is represented with a gauntlet – the symbol of power and a challenge of combat (to throw down the gauntlet). Yet the king is also shown as a chess piece (alongside the bishop and knight), and reduced to a part in a game beyond his control. Lastly, the anachronistic airship - one of the ‘flying machines of those madmen’ from the early days of aviation – may symbolise man’s eternal (but doomed) desire to fly high.
The Queen is represented with lavish but useless trappings. The gloves and slippers are of no use to her; nor the tear- drop earrings, for she has no head, arms or feet. Like the king and the chess piece, the doll shows her as but a toy for some greater power.

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