A Woman’s Place at Knole

Six contemporary art commissions highlight the progression towards equality through the stories of the women who have contributed to the spirit & history of Knole.

KNOLE HOUSE, SEVENOAKS, KENT, TN15 0RP
17 MAY – 4 NOVEMBER 2018

A key part of The National Trust’s Women and Power programme, A Woman’s Place at Knole shines a light on historical women’s voices, marking 100 years since the Representation of the People Act that gave some women the vote in the UK for the first time.

This critical moment in history is no better illustrated than at Knole where the rules of inheritance impacted so significantly on the women who lived there. 2017 Turner Prize winner Lubaina Himid joins five other commissioned artists responding through different media – sculpture, sound, film, interventions and a website, with works that encompass love, betrayal, class, gender and inheritance.

“Knole gives us new ways of seeing how the lives of women have been, and continue to be influenced by their relationship to notions of gender, place and time. Each artist has taken on and highlighted this conflicted space of privilege to reveal contradictions and an enduring contemporary relevance.  From the life of the 17th century laundry maid Grace Robinson, to Pepita, a lady of the house who began life as a Spanish dancer in the late 19th century.  The 20th century saw the infamous disinheritance of Vita Sackville-West and the house’s immortalisation at the pen of Virginia Woolf in Orlando. The responses by Himid, Mahony, Seers, Speed, Williams and Wilson in media ranging from website to sculpture and sound across this fascinating historic site, provides a pause to reflect on the fight for equality, its hard won battles and those undoubtedly ahead of us.”

Lucy Day & Eliza Gluckman, Directors of A Woman’s Place

“It is a pleasure and a privilege for Knole to host A Woman’s Place in 2018. Knole’s long history is packed full of stories and drama. This project provides the opportunity to filter that history and those stories through the viewpoint of the women who lived and worked here. Six celebrated women artists will champion the stories of Knole’s women with care and creativity for visitors to encounter as they explore Knole.”

Hannah Kay, General Manager, Knole, National Trust

‘All the centuries seemed lit up, the past expressive, articulate; not dumb & forgotten; but a crowd of people stood behind, not dead at all….’

Virginia Woolf quote from ‘Inheritance, The Story of Knole and the Sackvilles’ by Robert Sackville-West.

CJ Mahony’s Still Life, Still Waiting reflects on the women whose sense of belonging was tied to Knole, despite the fact that it could never belong to them. Mahony draws on the historical convention of depicting patrons of buildings as figures in stained glass windows, holding miniature versions of the buildings in their hands. Here the Gatehouse Tower is shown in the hands of a woman, giving Knole to those who could never own it.

The loss of Knole caused Vita Sackville –West to write “Knole is denied to me for ever, through a technical fault over which we have no control”. Alice May Williams’ video work appropriates this ‘fault’, exploring how we are formally categorised into groups at births (by sex, nationality, family) and reflects how the difference of a chromosome leads societal constructs to shape all of our lives.

Knole holds within its collections the original handwritten manuscript of the novel Orlando. This provided the impetus for a new work by Lindsay Seers – 2052 selves – a biography  –  digital book and film, presented online, to be experienced in four chapters episodically throughout the duration of the show.

Watch the trailer.

Orlando was a gift, ‘a love letter’, from Virginia Woolf to Vita Sackville-West. The book is often described as a biography of Vita, and of the house in novel form.  Seers interrogates this idea by interweaving Woolf, Sackville-West and actor collaborator Sara Sugarman through the work. She creates a new biography from the thoughts inspired by the objects, paintings, rooms and rhythm of Knole.

Emily Speed explores the impact of Knole on the women who lived here, and of three women specifically: Victoria Sackville-West, Josefa Durán known as Pepita (her mother and infamous flamenco-dancer), and Vita Sackville-West (her daughter). A working fountain, Innards borrows the form of a dressing table and makes public a space usually reserved for private ritual. Water, architecture, gardening and intimacy are brought together to reference important elements of these women’s lives.

The fountain echoes Victoria’s incredible energy and the installation of running water, electricity and telephone which she oversaw at Knole. The planting of Heliotrope nods to Vita’s later career as a gardener. It was also the base note of Victoria’s favourite scent. The work alludes to the difficulties and complexities of these mother–daughter relationships, and of finding moments for tenderness, care and sensuality against the backdrop of public display and the performance of being a ‘lady’ of Knole.

Speed has created a bespoke calling card as a nod to Victoria’s passion for stationery. Register here to receive this printed work this summer: www.emilyspeed.co.uk/letter

Melanie Wilson’s sound work will be heard through headphones as you walk through the house and grounds. It takes inspiration from the lives of Lady Anne Clifford and Lady Frances Cranfield and maps connections between their experiences as 17th century women and the lives of contemporary British women, using Knole as the thread. Lovers and collaborators are pitted against each other as greed and power play out in the 17th Century.

And what of the silent watchers, the women who served in the background, ensuring meals were made and laundry washed? Lubaina Himid’s work continues to address these silent, present characters. Described in inventories and novels, Grace Robinson, ‘the blackamor’ laundress watches from her positions on the pipes and guttering of stone and green courts, telling tales through water and air of life at Knole as a new flag is raised over Knole and flutters in the Kent breeze.

A Woman’s Place Project is supported using public funding by the National Lottery through Arts Council England, The National Trust, Trust New Art and project partners.  It forms part of Women and Power:  A century after the 1918 Representation of the People Act, the National Trust is joining the many other museums, cultural organisations, media and Parliament to tell these stories and celebrate this important moment in our nation’s history.

If you want to find out more about A Woman’s Place Knole, head to our Press page to see our full press release and all recent press coverage.

Knole is easily accessible by train. Sevenoaks station is a 30-minute journey on the Southeastern line from main London stations including Charing Cross, Cannon Street and London Bridge. Knole is a short taxi drive from the station. Satnav postcode: TN13 1HU. For full details on visiting Knole, go towww.nationaltrust.org.uk/knole

Lubaina Himid, Flag Design (work in progress), 2017. Image credit Lubaina Himid.

Lubaina Himid is the 2017 Turner Prize winner. She was born in Zanzibar and currently lives in Preston. Himid is Professor of Contemporary Art at the University of Central Lancashire. Forthcoming projects include: 2018 Harris Museum & Art Gallery, Preston, UK; Berlin Biennale, DE; 2019 Frans Hals Museum, Haarlem, NL. Recent exhibitions include, 2017 ‘Navigation Charts’, Spike Island, Bristol, UK [solo]; ‘Invisible Strategies’, Modern Art Oxford, UK [solo]; ‘The Place is Here’, Nottingham Contemporary, UK [group], She is represented by Hollybush Gardens, London.

CJ Mahony , Knole Draft Glass Design, 2018. Image credit CJ Mahony.

CJ Mahony makes large scale immersive environments that seek to unsettle, and small-scale objects that mimic and pretend. She graduated from her MA at Camberwell College of Art in 2012 and was co- founder and a director of Aid & Abet, an artist run space between 2011-2014. Exhibitions include: ‘These Restless Objects’, New Hall Women’s Art Collection, Cambridge 2016 [solo]; ‘Shadow Optics’, Lubomirov/Angus Hughes Gallery, London 2016 [group]; ‘Machines to Crystallise Time’ (with Georgie Grace), Smiths Row, Bury St. Edmunds 2015; ‘Terminalia’, Charlie Smith, London 2015 [group]; and ‘The Hand That Takes’, Cambridge Junction 2014.

Lindsay Seers, copyright Lindsay Seers / Keith Sargent

Lindsay Seers (born 1966) is a British artist working in London and living on the Isle of Sheppey.  Her works are in a number of collections including Tate and Arts Council and Artangel collections and the collection of MONA, Tasmania. She has won several prestigious grants and awards including the Sharjah Art Foundation Production Award, UAE; Le Jeu de Paume production award for the Toulouse Festival, France; the Paul Hamlyn Award; the Derek Jarman Award and a number of Arts Council and British Council Awards in support of her works.

Emily Speed, Rooms Designed for a Woman (film still), commissioned by Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Digital Video, 2017. Image courtesy of the artist.

Emily Speed has shown extensively in UK and abroad, including Fort Worth Contemporary Arts, Texas, Oredaria Gallery, Rome; Laumeier Sculpture Park, St Louis, USA; Danielle Arnaud Gallery, London; Bluecoat, Liverpool; Yorkshire Sculpture Park and Musée Cantonal des Beaux-Arts, Lausanne, Switzerland. In 2014/5 she was the Derek Hill Scholar at the British School at Rome. Speed has recently completed projects with In Certain Places, Preston and has created a new children’s library area for Bootle Library. During 2018 she will exhibit as part of Scotland+Venice at the 16th International Architecture Exhibition, La Biennale di Venezia, Look Again Festival, Aberdeen and as part of The Ring, a major new arts programme for the Canal & River Trust’s Arts on the Waterways with Meadow Arts. 

Alice May Williams, Still from ‘By the Accident of your Birth’, 2017. Image courtesy of the artist.

Alice May Williams graduated from her MFA Fine Art at Goldsmiths, University of London in 2014. Selected screenings, solo and group exhibitions include: ‘And Now…Grants for Irish Lesbians!’ Tintype, London 2017, Speke Of the Future, Speke Hall (National Trust) & Bluecoat, Liverpool 2015, An Unreliable Witness, Jerwood Project Space, London 2015, Liberties, Collyer Bristow, London 2015 and The Exchange, Penzance 2016. In 2016 she was selected for the Jerwood/FVU Awards 2016 and used her £20,000 bursary to make the film ‘Dream City – More, Better, Sooner’.

Melanie Wilson, Landscape II, 2013. Production Shot, Image credit Tom Medwell.

Melanie Wilson is an award-winning, multi-disciplinary performance maker. Her work is founded on the contemporary interplay between sound art, experimental forms of composition, language and live performance, and is under-pinned by political curiosity. Her work has been presented in the U.K and internationally and she has collaborated with artists and companies including Chris Goode, Clod Ensemble, Rotozaza, Shunt and visual artist Becky Beasley. Melanie also makes sound and composes for theatre director Katie Mitchell, including work for The National Theatre and The Barbican, London; Schauspeilhaus, Cologne; Avignon Festival; Theatretreffen, Berlin Festspeile; Schaubuhne, Berlin; Berg Theatre, Vienna, the Salzburg Festival and DeutscheSchauspeilHaus, Hamburg.