Disgrace

Hannah Quinlan (1991 - )
Rosie Hastings (1991 - )

set of 12 hard ground etchings with aquatint on paper

2021

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© Hannah Quinlan and Rosie Hastings

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  • About the work
    Location
    Country: UK
    City: London
    Place: Government Art Collection

    This series of twelve etchings are drawn from the book Disgrace: Feminism and the Political Right. The book includes essays and artwork, and explores the complexities behind the feminist movement in the UK by, in Hannah Quinlan’s words, applying  ‘the same critical framework we have applied to male culture to look at women’ .   

    The etchings take in the British imperial project in the late 1800s, with the Imperial Ladies Auxiliary and Tea, garden & evening parties, rifle competitions, polo matches, the trooping of the colours and other special events. The etchings, I’m not a woman I’m a conservative and We Will Not Be Silenced draw the viewer into considering charged issues that remain relevant in public life. In these works Quinlan and Hastings also take in the fraught debates surrounding transgender communities; the intersection of feminism and class politics (as seen in Votes for Ladies); and the links between the feminist movement in Britain and eugenics (in Social Hygiene) and fascism (in Blackshirts). The etching Sex Wars, depicts a clash between sex-positive campaigners and anti-pornography feminists in the 1980s, recalling when anti-sex work campaigners identified women as objects of oppression who needed to be protected, regardless of whether that protection was solicited. 

    Quinlan and Hastings’ etchings in Disgrace articulate a take on the history of the feminist movement, as one entwined with violence and oppression, set against what they have called ‘the lefty rose-tinted glaze around feminism’. Their works investigate how society has constructed its ideas of feminist progress to consider how enlightened this progress really is. ‘Bad history is everyone’s history,’ writes Lola Olufemi in her essay within the book in which these etchings appear. The works bring to mind also the words of the poet Adrienne Rich about the importance ‘as women committed to the liberation of women, to know the past in order to consider what we want to conserve and what we want not to repeat or continue’. 


  • About the artist
    Hannah Quinlan works together with Rosie Hastings as an artist and as life partners. Their practice includes film, drawing, installation and performance. Their work often explores feminist and LGBTQ+ culture in the Western context, exploring how this is reflective of broader societal structures. Both artists were born in 1991 in Newcastle, going on to graduate with a BFA from Goldsmiths College in London in 2014. Solo exhibitions of their work have been held at institutions including The Box, Plymouth (2023); Tate Britain (Art Now, 2022); Mostyn, Llandudno, Wales; and Focal Point Gallery, Southend-on-Sea (2020); Two Queens, Leicester and Queer Thoughts, New York (2018); and The 15th Venice Architecture Biennale (2016). Group exhibitions with the work have been held at institutions including Herbert Art Gallery, Coventry (2023); Centre national d'Art Contemporain, Grenoble, France (2022); Pinchuk Art Centre, Kiev, Ukraine (2021); Whitechapel Gallery, London (online in 2020); Fondazione Muisei Civici di Venezia, Venice, Italy; and Hayward Gallery, London (2019); and at the Venice Architecture Biennale, Italy(2018). They won the Jarman Award in 2020.
    Rosie Hastings works together with Hannah Quinlan as an artist, and as life partners. Their practice includes film, drawing, installation and performance. Their work often explores feminist and LGBTQ+ culture in the Western context, exploring how this is reflective of broader societal structures. Both artists were born in 1991 in Newcastle, going on to graduate with a BFA from Goldsmiths College in London in 2014. Solo exhibitions of their work have been held at institutions including The Box, Plymouth (2023); Tate Britain (Art Now, 2022); Mostyn, Llandudno, Wales; and Focal Point Gallery, Southend-on-Sea (2020); Two Queens, Leicester and Queer Thoughts, New York (2018); and The 15th Venice Architecture Biennale (2016). Group exhibitions with the work have been held at institutions including Herbert Art Gallery, Coventry (2023); Centre national d'Art Contemporain, Grenoble, France (2022); Pinchuk Art Centre, Kiev, Ukraine (2021); Whitechapel Gallery, London (online in 2020); Fondazione Muisei Civici di Venezia, Venice, Italy; and Hayward Gallery, London (2019); and at the Venice Architecture Biennale, Italy(2018). They won the Jarman Award in 2020.
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  • Details
    Title
    Disgrace
    Date
    2021
    Medium
    set of 12 hard ground etchings with aquatint on paper
    Dimensions
    (each) height: 38.7 cm; width: 50.0 cm
    Acquisition
    Purchased from Arcadia Missa, February 2022
    Provenance
    Arcadia Missa, London UK; from whom purchased by UK Government Art Collection, 1 February 20222
    GAC number
    19037