Paula Rego has long had a fascination with
Charlotte Bront's "Jane Eyre" and Jean Rhys' "The Wide
Sargasso Sea". In 2002 this culminated in the production
of twenty-five lithographs, reproduced here in a
large-format artist's book, along with excerpts from the
novel. Marina Warner, in her eloquent and perceptive
introduction, examines why "Jane Eyre" should have
inspired Rego's new work. Charlotte Bront and Paula Rego
share an imaginative ardour that abolishes the veil
between what takes place in fact or in fantasy. As
storytellers, they really are kith and kin: Rego
reproduces the psychological drama in the book through
subjective distortions of scale, cruel expressiveness of
gesture and frown, and disturbingly stark contrasts of
light and welling shadows.Again and again in the story,
Jane Eyre is closeted in a small, confined space,
sometimes most terribly against her will, sometimes
secluded of her own accord: in an early piece of
powerful scene-setting, she is locked in the dark
chamber where John Reed died and is so terrified by the
dead man's presence that she has a fit. This is only the
first of a sequence of experiences when, for better or
worse, imagination takes over Jane's being. Such an
emphasis on the fire in the mind and the dark outside
might perhaps reveal, without saying much more, how
Paula Rego of all artists would respond to "Jane
Eyre".Paula Rego has been making images out of made-up
stories since she herself was a child, and if anything
can be said to offer a consistent thread through her
astonishing, fertile and multi-faceted production it is
this: she has been a narrative artist all along, and one
whose stories are not reproduced from life as observed
or remembered, but from goings-on in the camera lucida
of the mind's eye. Rego has not lost in adulthood the
energy of the child's make-believe world: 'It all comes
out of my head,' she says, 'All little girls improvise,
and it's not just illustration: I make it my own.'
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