Jessica Dismorr
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Jessica Dismorr (1885 - 1939), was an English artist and one of only two women members of the Vorticist movement.
She was born at Gravesend, England, and moved with her family to Hampstead in the 1890s. Her father was a rich businessman, as a consequence of which she was free of financial worries. She attended the Slade School of Art, 1902-03, then trained under Max Bohm at Etaples, and at the Académie de la Palette in Paris, 1910-13, where she studied with Jean Metzinger and was in the circle around the Scottish Colourist, John Duncan Fergusson. She exhibited with him and S. J. Peploe in October 1912 at the Stafford Gallery, London, at the same time as Roger Fry's second Post-Impressionist show, in which they were not included.
She met Wyndham Lewis in 1913. Robin Ody, a close friend and the executor of her will (all the beneficiaries were women), summed her up as "the Edwardian phenomenon of the new woman". She maintained a studio in the King's Road, Chelsea, London, as well as taking frequent trips to France. She also essayed into sexual freedom. Ody considered that she did not have a physical relationship with Lewis, one of the main reasons being her inclination towards her own gender, although according to one of Lewis's lovers, Kate Lechmere, Dismorr had a difficult love affair with Wyndham Lewis, and was, along with fellow artist Kate Saunders, one of the "little lapdogs who wanted to be Lewis’s slaves and do everything for him". Lechmere gives this as the reason for Dismorr stripping naked in the middle of Oxford Street on one occasion.
In fact Saunders had twice turned down proposals from Walter Sickert, and in later life said that she thought it was not to the woman's advantage when two artists married, as she would inevitably relegate her own artistic needs below those of her husband's.
It must also be borne in mind that Lechmere's relationship with Lewis had ended bitterly, and she carried out a legal struggle to recover money owed her by him. Lechmere had provided all the funds to pay for the Rebel Art Centre, where the Vorticists first met in 1914—a fact which Lewis had to admit to Christopher Nevinson who had not wanted "any of these damned women" in the group.
Dismorr was a signatory to the Vorticist manifesto published in the first issue of their magazine Blast in 1914. She shared the group's depiction of the dynamics of the machine, but little of her work from this period survives. Apart from her, the only other female member of the group was Helen Saunders. A painting The Vorticists at the Restaurant de la Tour Eiffel: Spring 1915 [1] by William Roberts shows the seven males dominating the foreground and the two women behind (Dismorr in the doorway being the furthest away).
During World War I she was a nurse in France and then with the American Friends Service Committee. She had a nervous breakdown in 1920 following her war experiences. She received medical advice not to paint, but Lewis suspected that it was her modern style that was causing the doctors concern, and wrote to her "the best possible distraction for you would be to paint".
She was at the centre of the London avant-garde world, acquainted with both T.S. Eliot and Ezra Pound, with her poems and illustrations being published, including in the Vorticist Blast magazine. In the 1930s she did portraits of poets, including Dylan Thomas and exhibited with Charles Ginner and Barbara Hepworth in the London Group, as well as Ivon Hitchens and Ben Nicholson in the Seven and Five Society.
Throughout her life she continued painting and exhibiting her work, which became completely abstract during the 1930s. She committed suicide by hanging on August 29, 1939, five days before Britain declared war on Germany.
Quentin Stevenson is currently writing her biography. Catherine Heathcock's (unpublished) PhD thesis contains a complete catalogue of Dismorr's works. The letters between Dismorr and Lewis are now at Cornell University.