Judy Chicago

1 of 4

(b. 1750, Hannover, Germany; d. 1848, Hannover, Germany)

Caroline Herschel was a pioneering female astronomer, and the first woman to discover a comet. Her achievements enabled generations of women to develop a career in the sciences, a field that was once exclusively reserved for men.

Herschel grew up in Hannover, Germany, with ten siblings. Her father valued education so highly that he educated Herschel against her mother’s wishes, and she proved to be an apt pupil. At age ten, she contracted typhus, a disease that would permanently stunt her growth at four-foot-three. When she was twenty-two, she moved to Bath, England, to live with her brother William and become his housekeeper. While there, she continued the studies in music and mathematics that she began as a child, and developed a keen interest in her brother’s hobby, astronomy.

She began as her brother’s apprentice, grinding and polishing mirrors for his burgeoning telescope business. Her new-found passion developed into a career and she soon became an astronomer in her own right. William gave Herschel her first Newtonian telescope, which she used to discover three new nebulae in 1783. She went on to identify eight new comets between the years of 1786 and 1797, her first being Comet Herschel (C/1786 P1). She was the first woman to discover a comet and until the 1980s, she held the record for the most comets discovered by a women.

When Herschel was 32, King George III appointed her brother William as his personal astronomer, with an annual pension of two hundred pounds. Herschel received fifty pounds annually to be her brother’s assistant, making her the first woman in science to receive recognition for her academic work and research. It is thought that Herschel quite possibly did more work than her brother. In addition to her work as William’s assistant, she also performed the exhaustive calculations that accompanied their research and documented each of their trials and results.

Herschel mapped out the exact placement of both her and William’s discoveries, including the planet Uranus as well as numerous clusters, comets, and nebulae, and published them after William’s death in 1822. Upon receiving the catalogue, the Royal Astronomical Society and the Royal Irish Academy made her the first female honorary member in 1835. In 1846, Herschel was recognized for a lifetime of devotion and achievement in the field of astronomy with the King of Prussia’s Gold Medal of Science. She died two years later, at the age of ninety-eight, well-received in society and highly recognized for her talents.

Caroline Herschel at The Dinner Party

Caroline Herschel’s place setting and runner reference astronomy and her monumental achievements in the field. The eye in the center of the plate reminds the viewer of Herschel’s search through the telescope to discover the components of the universe. The illuminated capital letter “C” cradles a telescope similar to the Newtonian model Herschel’s brother gave her that launched her career. The shape that surrounds her name is derived from Herschel’s own rendering of the Milky Way (Chicago, The Dinner Party,114).

The runner is intricately designed and embroidered with images of the cosmos, including clouds, stars, and representations of the eight comets Herschel discovered over an eleven-year span. The main body of the runner illustrates a brightly shining star or sun whose rays intersect with concentric rings that are suggestive of charting or mapping. Astronomical notations as well as references to the trajectories of comets are also embroidered on the back of the runner (Chicago, Embroidering Our Heritage, 209). Gold and silver threads embellish a deep navy and jet black sky, referencing the brilliance of stars seeming to shine in celebration of Herschel’s invaluable contributions to the field of astronomy.

Primary Sources

Herschel, Mary Cornwallis. Memoirs and Correspondence of Caroline Herschel. Appleton, N.Y.: independently published, 1876.

Lubbock, Constance. The Herschel Chronicle: The Life Story of Sir William Herschel and His Sister Caroline Herschel. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1933.

Translations, Editions, and Secondary Sources

Alic, Margaret. Hypatia’s Heritage: A History of Women in Science. Boston: Beacon Press, 1986.

Clerke, Agnes M. The Herschels and Modern Astronomy. New York: Macmillian, 1895.

Herschel, Mary Cornwallis. Memoirs of Caroline Herschel. Bath: The William Herschel Society, 2000.

Hoskin, Michael. The Herschel Partnership, As Viewed by Caroline. Cambridge, UK: Science History Publications, 2003.

——. William Herschel. New York: W. W. Norton, 1963.

——, ed. Caroline Herschel’s Autobiographies. Cambridge, UK: Science History Publications, 2003.

Lubbock, Constance. The Herschel Chronicle. Bath: The William Herschel Society, [n.d.].

Caption

Judy Chicago American, born 1939. Caroline Herschel Place Setting, 1974–1979. Runner: Cotton/linen fabric, woven interface support material (horsehair, wool, and linen), cotton twill tape, silk, synthetic gold cord, wool, wool yarn, thread Plate: Porcelain with overglaze enamel (China paint), Runner: 51 3/8 x 30 in. (130.5 x 76.2 cm) Plate: 13 7/8 x 13 7/8 x 2 3/4 in. (35.2 x 35.2 x 7 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Gift of The Elizabeth A. Sackler Foundation, 2002.10-PS-29. © artist or artist's estate (Photo: Brooklyn Museum, 2002.10-PS-29_threequarter_PS9.jpg)

Title

Caroline Herschel Place Setting

Date

1974–1979

Medium

Runner: Cotton/linen fabric, woven interface support material (horsehair, wool, and linen), cotton twill tape, silk, synthetic gold cord, wool, wool yarn, thread Plate: Porcelain with overglaze enamel (China paint)

Classification

Sculpture

Dimensions

Runner: 51 3/8 x 30 in. (130.5 x 76.2 cm) Plate: 13 7/8 x 13 7/8 x 2 3/4 in. (35.2 x 35.2 x 7 cm)

Credit Line

Gift of The Elizabeth A. Sackler Foundation

Accession Number

2002.10-PS-29

Rights

© artist or artist's estate

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Frequent Art Questions

  • Who was Caroline Herschel?

    Caroline Herschel was a pioneering female astronomer, and the first woman to discover a comet. Her achievements paved the way for women to develop careers in the sciences.
    Her place setting and runner reference astronomy and her achievements in the field. The eye in the center reminds me her search through the telescope. and a telescope is intertwined with the first letter of her name on the runner.
    Thanks for the information.
  • I'm guessing she had something to do with astronomy.

    Yes! Caroline Herschel was a pioneering astronomer and the first woman to discover a comet. There is a crater on the Moon named after her today.
    Her runner is arguably the most intricate at The Dinner Party, it was executed by Marjorie Biggs, the most talented embroiderer on the project. The celestial references are clear, the shape around Herschel's name is based on her own sketch of the Milky Way.
  • Can you tell me more about this one with the eye?

    The eye and the celestial motifs in the runner reference Herschel's career as an astronomer.
    She was the first woman to discover a comet and ultimately discovered 8 new comets; there are 8 comets depicted on the back of the runner. The eye is a nod to looking through a telescope.
  • Who did the embroidery?

    The embroidery, as with all aspects of The Dinner Party, was completed by a team of many people led by Judy Chicago. You may be especially interested in Caroline Herschel's runner. It was executed by Marjorie Biggs who was the project's most skilled embroiderer who taught many of the other assistants. She also did the triangular Millennium Runners at each corner.
    Wow!

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