Showing posts with label Modernism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Modernism. Show all posts

Thursday, 23 February 2017

'Spots of Colour': Impressionism and Woolf's Kew Gardens

In this post, I am going to trace the influence of Impressionism in one of Virginia Woolf's most famous short stories, Kew Gardens. However, before I begin examining the text, I would like to provide a brief introduction to Impressionism. 

The Impressionist movement rejected the conventional tendency to document the precise details of a moment in time, and instead sought to capture its general essence, or pervading emotion.[1]  

Impressionists were interested in finding new ways to represent light and movement, and often spurned studio-based composition, in favour of painting en plein air – in the open air.[2]

It was Claude Monet, perhaps the most well-known Impressionist, who gave the movement its name, with his painting ‘Impression, Sunrise’ (1872), depicting a hazy morning in the harbour at Le Havre – the artist’s hometown.[3] 



Impressionism was hugely influential, prompting artists the world over to imitate its style. The painter Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf’s sister, exhibited substantial influence of the movement in her work.

Woolf was inspired by her sister’s paintings, in which the depiction of light featured heavily and people’s faces were often indistinct – yet the work still conveyed so much emotion and meaning.

Woolf began to wonder whether the same could be done with literature. In Modern Fiction, she seeks to distance herself from the Materialist style of writers like Arnold Bennett, who were obsessed with representing life exactly as it was. 

Look within and life, it seems, is very far from being “like this”. Examine for a moment an ordinary mind on an ordinary day. The mind receives a myriad impressions – trivial, fantastic, evanescent, or engraved with the sharpness of steel.[4]

This much-quoted passage is perhaps a good segue into discussing Woolf’s Kew Gardens, and its unique exploration of time, characterisation and place.

The opening paragraph is replete with Impressionist influence. Woolf notices the ‘spots of colour’[5] on the surrounding flower petals, gesturing to the techniques of Monet and his contemporaries.


This noticeable influence continues with the sustained treatment of natural light, as Woolf artfully describes its delicate movement across the lush summer foliage in the following passage.

[…] the light now settled upon the flesh of a leaf, revealing the branching thread of fibre beneath the surface, and again it moved on and spread its illumination in the vast green spaces beneath the dome of the heart shaped and tongue shaped leaves.[6]

As the narrative continues, people are introduced, but Woolf chooses not to dwell on providing accurate physical descriptions of each character, preferring instead to focus on their relation to space.

The figures of these men and women straggled past the flower-bed with a curiously irregular movement not unlike that of the white and blue butterflies who crossed the turf in zig-zag flights from bed to bed.[7]

The writer’s interest in painting is evident in her description of one of the first characters, Eleanor, who recalls an evocative memory with her husband. Here, Woolf alludes to Impressionism, and specifically Monet.

Imagine six little girls sitting before their easels twenty years ago, down by the side of the lake, painting the water-lilies, the first red water-lilies I’d ever seen.[8]

As Eleanor, along with her husband Simon and their two children, walk on and out of sight, Woolf presents an image of the family as if one were gazing directly at an Impressionist painting.

They walked on past the flower-bed, now walking four abreast, and soon diminished in size among the trees and looked half transparent as the sunlight and shade swam over their backs in large trembling irregular patches.[9]

As Woolf moves around Kew Gardens, flitting from person to person, fecund descriptions of the vegetation, and animal (snail) life, punctuate the moments spent with the different characters.

Firstly, we meet a married couple with children, then two men, followed by two elderly women and finally, a young couple. We catch snippets of their conversations – some are trivial; some are inane – but this of little importance. 

Woolf’s aim is to present a series of fragmented moments, or impressions, that when brought together, reveal a sense of what one’s experience of life might actually be like, in direct contrast to her Materialist forebears.

This is Woolf, the writer, using the philosophy and the techniques of the Impressionist artists to present an image of life at its most vivid, where everything is symbiotically linked, as described in the closing lines:

[…] all the time the motor omnibuses were turning their wheels and changing their gear; like a vast nest of Chinese boxes all of wrought steel turning ceaselessly one within another, the city murmured; on the top of which the voices cried aloud and the petals of myriads of flowers flashed their colours into the air.[10]


Seth Armstrong-Twigg. 



[1] Robert L. Herbert, Impressionism: Art, Leisure, and Parisian Society (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1988), p. xiv.
[2] Jessica Gunderson, Impressionism (Mankato: Creative Education, 2009), p. 21.
[3] Ibid, p. 15.
[4] Virginia Woolf, Modern Fiction, ed. by Andrew McNeille, The Essays of Virginia Woolf, 6 vols (London: The Hogarth Press, 1984), v4, p. 160.
[5] Virginia Woolf, Selected Short Stories (London: Penguin, 2000), p. 46.
[6] Ibid, p. 46.
[7] Ibid, p. 46.
[8] Ibid, p. 47.
[9] Ibid, p. 48.
[10] Ibid, p. 52. 

Friday, 26 February 2016

Terra Nullis: Post-colonialism and Liminal Spaces in Mansfield's Short Stories

As a Modernist writer existing on the fringes of European Modernist literature, Katherine Mansfield inhabits a complex, post-colonial liminal space. With a number of her short stories set in New Zealand, I intend to examine how Mansfield uses liminal spaces to explore colonialism, arguing that Mansfield, herself, inhabited a liminal space. Defined as 'being on the boundary or threshold, esp. by being transitional or intermediate, between two states, situations, etc' (1) liminality is key when thinking about post-colonial writing. For the Gothic genre, liminal spaces are characterised by windows and doorways. This imagery moves into Modernist stories, seen in Woolf's Mrs Dalloway and other stories. Mansfield's innovative short stories characterise the liminal space as a place of travel and movement. Often characters make journeys on trains, boats, across countries and bodies of water with this time on transportation offering the characters time to reflect on their situations. Wilson contends that 'liminal spaces appear in colonial texts as those terra nullis locations ready to be written upon, interpreted, stolen, and named.' (2)

New Zealand, a colony of the British Empire, can be considered a liminal space. O'Sullivan argues that 'the almost innate belief in most New Zealanders [is] that theirs is a classless community, that the social hierarchies of an older world, if not quite shucked off, one certainly less constraining, has perhaps lead to odd distortions'. (3) This works in tandem with Bennett's observation that 'the transplantation of English culture into a New Zealand context leads to the question of what that culture 'really' looks like.' (4) So, it could be argued, Mansfield was living and working in a liminal, complex space. New Zealand was, as its name suggests, new (to the British Empire). And so, 'the complexity of a New Zealand cultural identity' (5) is something Mansfield addresses in her short stories. Using one of her famous short stories, 'The Garden Party' for analysis, I intend to examine how Mansfield explores New Zealand's cultural complexity from the viewpoint of class hierarchies.

After hearing about the death of a workman who lives close to the Sheridan's property, Laura Sheridan enters a state of contemplation. Is it still okay for the Sheridan's garden party to go ahead when a man from the neighbouring cottages has died? Would it be rude to the grieving wife? This accident and situation allow Mansfield to unpack ideas surrounding class in New Zealand. The dead workman is described as a 'drunken workman' (6) by Jose with Laura questioning this claim. The Sheridan's house and class position are then juxtaposed with the cottages, as Mansfield creates an image that highlights class disparity:

'The very smoke coming out of their chimneys was poverty-stricken. Little rags and shreds of smoke, so unlike the great silvery plumes that uncurled from the Sheridans' chimneys' (p.343)

Mansfield subtly highlights how class is societal concern that still prevails in New Zealand, despite the belief that New Zealand might describe itself as classless. The 'broad road' that separates the Sheridan's from the 'little mean dwellings' (p.343) acts as a threshold between two very different class situations. The road towards the Sheridans' house Laura travels to arrive at the cottages is 'gleamed white' (p.347) in contrast to the lane the cottages are placed on which is 'smoky and dark' (p.347). This road acts as a liminal space that Laura inhabits before she comes face-to-face with death and the privilges of her own class.  O'Sullivan notes that 'Laura's early amazment at a workman's delighting in the scent of lavender is merely a novice's version of her mother's fully fledge snobbery.' (7) Laura moves in an unstable place between recognising her position and understanding the luck of being born into a certain family at a certain time. The story of 'The Garden Party' allows Mansfield to deconstruct the notion that New Zealeand is a classless community. She uses liminal spaces so her characters can reflect on their position in the colonial community.

Mansfield found herself in the 'broad road', not able to idenitify as an indigenous New Zealanders nor what can be considered a "British citizen". Referred to as the 'little colonial' at school in Britain, Mansfield faced a 'liminal positioning between empire and colony.' (8) Bennett describes Mansfield position in relation to New Zealand - 'as an indentity and indentification - is a place that defines Mansfield above all, as displace, as placeless.' (9) Writing from this 'placeless' position, a space between two identities, Mansfield was able to examine life and identity from a unique position. Seen as the 'other,' Mansfield was able to explore liminal spaces and how they impact characters in her short stories in relation to post-colonialism and how being between two spaces affects indentities.

Josie Cray

(1)'liminal' adj. OED
(2) Wisker, Gina. (2007) "Crossing Liminal Spaces: Teaching the Postcolonial Gothic" Pedagogy: Critical Approaches to Teaching Literature, Language, Composition, and Culture, 7. 3 pp.401-26 (p.412)
(3) Mansfield, Katherine, New Zealand Stories, ed. by Vincent O’Sullivan (Auckland: OUP Australia and New Zealand, 1998) p.8
(4)Andrew Bennett, Katherine Mansfield (United Kingdom: Northcote House in association with the British Council, 2002) p.42
(5) Bennett, Katherine Mansfield, p.42
(6) Katherine Mansfield, Selected Stories, ed. by Angela Smith (New York: Oxford University Press, 2008). p.344
(7) Mansfield, New Zealand Stories, ed. by Vincent O’Sullivan, p.9
(8) McLeod, John, ed., Routledge Companion to Postcolonial Studies (Routledge Companions) (London: Taylor & Francis, 2007) p.3
(9) Bennett, Katherine Mansfield, p.43