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12 December 2024
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Paula Rego
Depression No. 10
, 2007
64.5 x 80 cm. (25.4 x 31.5 in.)
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Paula Rego
British/Portuguese, 1935–2022
Depression No. 10
,
2007
Paula Rego
Depression No. 10
, 2007
64.5 x 80 cm. (25.4 x 31.5 in.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
View to Scale
Zoom
Medium
Pastel on paper
Size
64.5 x 80 cm. (25.4 x 31.5 in.)
Price
Price on Request
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Victoria Miro Gallery
London / Venice
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About this Artwork
Provenance
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Exhibitions
Paula Rego: The Forgotten, Victoria Miro Gallery, London, 19 November 2021- 12 February 2022
Paula Rego, Giving Fear a Face, CEART: Centro de Arte Tomas y Valiente, Madrid, Spain, 5 April- 21 July 2019
Paula Rego: Secrets and Stories, Casa das Histórias, Cascais, Portugal 7 April - 17 September 2017
Marlborough Fine Art, London 13 March - 1 April 2017
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Description
‘She hid these pictures for ten years because she was ashamed. She was ashamed of suffering from depression.’ — Nick Willing
The Depression series, 2007, is a suite of large-scale pastels born out of an especially debilitating depressive episode and Rego’s attempts to draw her way out of it. In reference to the series, Nick Willing says, ‘She hid these pictures for ten years because she was ashamed. She was ashamed of suffering from depression.’ Rego discusses the works publicly for the first time in Willing’s 2017 film Paula Rego: Secrets & Stories. The film aired in cinemas in Portugal for many weeks and the works were subsequently shown at House of Stories, the museum in Cascais dedicated exclusively to Rego’s work. Discussing the effect of the film and exhibition in Portugal, Willing says, ‘What happened was that every TV panel show and morning show would talk about depression. The Portuguese never talked about depression, it was a big taboo, but one of the things that Paula did, which is what she’s always done, is she broke the ice and allowed them to talk about it. She forced people to confront it and talk about it and open up.’
Deborah Levy writes, ‘To encounter the 2007 series titled Depression, is to understand that the full spectrum of female emotional life has been embodied for us by a uniquely fearless artist.’
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