Blending flights of poetic rhapsody with more traditional critical language, This Dark Country is as seductive as it is scholarly ... Riveting
Financial Times
[A] wonderful book. I am impressed and fascinated. It is beautifully written. Each woman artist, in this superb book, addresses the need to transform the confines she inhabits into a space of empowerment. These artists all lived and worked in the first part of the twentieth century yet their legacy continues to be relevant
- Celia Paul,
A brilliant book ... A truly radical aesthetics fit for the twenty-first century at last!
- Thérèse Oulton,
A beautifully written and important art historical work, This Dark Country is a magnificent debut by one of Britain’s most electrifying new talents. I cannot wait to read what she writes next!
- Camilla Grudova, author of THE DOLL's ALPHABET,
[An] unusual and refreshing group biography of artists ... I loved Birrell's brilliant re-apprehension of Rodin’s The Thinker through the experience of Gwen John. And her explanation of the magnitude of rooms and importance of room, in these women’s lives
- Leanne Shapton,
[A] beautiful, bold new book … explores the desires and ambitions of women artists, moving beyond the frame to reflect lives that rarely fit convention
- Chlöe Ashby, Elephant
Birrell’s blend of art criticism and biography works best when it is tethered to real-world calculation. She is particularly good at teasing out the stubborn material facts that underpin the most serene of still lifes
- Kathryn Hughes, Guardian
Rebecca Birrell urges us to ask new questions about gender and genre, domesticity and work … At its heart is the challenge of understanding the lives and works of women whose desires and ambitions often demanded secrecy, evasion and ambiguity
- Norma Clarke, Literary Review
[I was] captivated by this extraordinary book - stayed up way too late scribbling my astonishment on all the pages
- Doireann Ní Ghríofa, author of 'A Ghost in the Throat',
This is a bold, unusual book, filled with archival research, exuberant ideas and a determination to counter misogyny
- Diana Souhami, RA Magazine
We have not generally thought of the still life as a radical feminist genre – until now. In This Dark Country, Rebecca Birrell gives a sensitive, deeply researched look at the lives behind the still lives, showing us how for a group of early twentieth-century women artists the home became a radical feminist space in which to redefine domesticity and their relationships to the world outside. There is a calm and companionable stillness to Birrell’s prose, too; I loved seeing these paintings through Birrell’s eyes.
- Lauren Elkin,