Text source: 'Artists in Britain Since 1945' by David Buckman (Art Dictionaries Ltd, part of Sansom & Company)
Painter in oil on canvas, born in London, who studied at Royal Academy Schools. Won a Silver Medal at Paris Salon in 1923 and also exhibited prolifically at Agnew in Manchester, RWA, RA, SWA, Royal Glasgow Institute of the Fine Arts and elsewhere. Spink & Son included two impressive figure pieces in their Twentieth Century British show in 1984. She lived for a time in Ealing, Middlesex.
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Biography from Liss Llewellyn
Madeline Green was a figurative artist who studied at the Royal Academy Schools (1906–11). Extremely active even during her studies, she joined 26 other artists in setting up the Ealing Art Guild in 1910, and in 1911 she was awarded two RA medals.
This rapid success marked the beginning of a productive career, and she went on to exhibit regularly from 1912 until the year of her death – 24 times at the RA’s Summer Exhibition alone, as well as at the RGI, the SWA, Society of Graphic Art, Venice Biennale, in Adelaide and Melbourne and at the Paris Salon – winning a gold medal for The Chenille Net in 1947.
Often using herself as the model, Green made paintings noted at the time for their overt femininity and enigmatic subjects, which investigated how notions of sexuality and gender could be explored through modernist art.