Judy Chicago

1 of 6

(b. 1858, London, England; d. 1944, Woking, England)

Ethel Smyth was a twentieth-century British composer and a champion of women’s rights and female musicians. During her lifetime, she composed symphonies, choral works (musical pieces written for a choir), and operas including The Wreckers,1906, and is most well known for The March of Women, an anthem for the women’s suffrage movement. In 1922, she was named a Dame of the British Empire.

She studied Brahmsian musical composition (the romantic style of lyrical and classical music developed by the German composer Brahms) and music theory at Leipzig Conservatory in Germany beginning in 1877 and her sophisticated music elicited rave reviews. In 1889, she returned to London and developed talents in multiple areas of composition, culminating in an oeuvre that included orchestral pieces, choral arrangements, chamber music, and six operas. She earned acclaim for her performance of Mass in D, which was enthusiastically received in London in 1893. Despite this success and her immense talent, she struggled to find musicians to perform her works because she was a woman.

In 1910, Smyth met Emmeline Pankhurst, an ardent feminist, one of the founders of the British suffrage movement, and head of the Women’s Social and Political Union, a militant all-women’s activist group founded in 1903 that campaigned especially for women’s suffrage. Due, in part, to Pankhurst’s influence, Smyth took two years off from her music career to devote her time to women’s rights and suffrage activism. During this time, she wrote The March of Women, 1911, a piece that later became the battle cry for the British Women’s Movement. In 1912, Smyth and Pankhurst were arrested in London, along with 100 other suffragettes, for throwing stones at the houses of suffrage opponents; she was imprisoned for two months. While in Holloway prison, Smyth led the women in a rousing rendition of The March of Women, conducting them with her toothbrush, in what would become the most famous performance of the song.

Smyth began to lose her hearing in 1912. After visiting an aural specialist in Paris, she went to Egypt, where she began work on The Boatswain’s Mate, a comic opera. This became one of the most revolutionary pieces she completed, due in part to her unorthodox style and method—the first half of the opera contained both words and music, but the second half was entirely instrumental. The Boatswain’s Mate, a more accessible and light-hearted piece for the general public, was partially in response to the Grand Opera style of the time, which emphasized splendor and sophistication.

In spite of several distinguished awards and recognitions, she continued to have difficulty getting her music published and performed because of her sex. She ultimately gave up her music career due to her increased hearing loss. Smyth wrote about her life in several biographies, Impressions that Remained, 1919, and the memoir Streaks of Life, 1921, which captured her experiences in music, activism, and as an open lesbian, discussing her romantic involvements with famous women of her time, including Lady Pauline Trevelyan; the Empress Eugénie; heiress Winnaretta Singer; Lady Mary Ponsonby; writer Edith Somerville; and writer, Virginia Woolf. Smyth died in England in 1944 at the age of 86. She remains a highly regarded female composer and a strong musical and political voice of the early twentieth century.

Ethel Smyth at The Dinner Party

Smyth’s place setting for The Dinner Party represents her role as both musician and activist for women’s rights incorporating musical motifs as well as a tailored suit, her preferred style of dress.

The plate is created as a grand piano complete with raised lid, painted keys and a stand with notations from Smyth’s famous opera The Boatswain’s Mate. The plate represents Smyth’s immense musical talents and its three-dimensionality can be interpreted as her attempt, with both her music and her open sexuality, to push the confines of a society unable to open fully to women. The unorthodox arrangement of the piano keys may also be a reference to Smyth’s unique life, unorthodox in early 20th century society.

Musical elements are also carried into the runner that, on the front, depicts a musical staff in which the capital letter “E” in “Ethel Smyth” is incorporated into the image of a G-clef. A metronome, an instrument used by musicians to help keep perfect time, can be found on the back of the runner.

The runner is made to represent a tweed suit that has been cut open and laid out, as if being tailored. Chicago describes the suit having being “‘taken in’ to fit the confines of the runner’s dimensions, a metaphor for the tragic containment of Smyth’s immense talent” (Chicago, The Dinner Party, 139). The suit is a direct reference to Smyth’s preference for wearing masculine tailored suits, a style that was scandalous at the time. Running up one length of the suit is a tape measure, which alludes to the word “measure” used in both music and tailoring.

The pockets on the front of the runner are a reference not only to the pockets on men’s suit coats, but also to the over-sized pockets worn by women around their waists to carry items such as needlework or keys in the 18th and 19th centuries.

Primary Sources

Books

Impressions That Remained (1919)

Streaks of Life (1924)

A Three-Legged Tour in Greece (1927)

A Final Burning of Boats Etc. (1928)

Female Pipings in Eden (1934)

Beecham and Pharaoh (1935)

As Time Went On ... (1936)

Inordinate (?) Affection (1936)

Maurice Baring (1938)

What Happened Next (1940)

Operas (Music and Libretto by Ethel Smyth)

Fantasio (1898)

The Boatswain’s Mate (1916)

The Wreckers (1916)

Der Wald (1920)

Fete Galante (1923)

Entente Cordiale (1926)

Vocal

Mass in D, chorus and orchestra (1891)

Four Songs, one voice and ensemble (1908)

Songs of Sunrise, voices: soprano, alto, tenor, and bass (1911)

Hey Nonny No, chorus and orchestra (1911)

Sleepless Dreams, chorus and orchestra (1912)

Three Moods of the Sea, one voice and orchestra (1913)

Three Songs, one voice and orchestra (1913)

Dreamings, voices: soprano, alto, tenor, and bass (1920)

A Spring Canticle, from Der Wald, chorus and orchestra (1926)

The Prison, soprano and bass voices, chorus and orchestra (1930)

Orchestral

Serenade, D (1890)

Antony and Cleopatra, overture (1890)

The March of Women (1911)

Concerto for Violin, Horn, and Orchestra (1927)

On the Cliffs of Cornwall, from The Wreckers (1928)

Two Interlinked French Melodies, from Entente Cordiale (1929)

Translations, Editions, and Secondary Sources

Brett, Philip, Elizabeth Wood, and Gary Thomas, eds. Queering the Pitch: The New Gay and Lesbian Musicology. London and New York: Routledge, 1994.

Collis, Louise. Impetuous Heart: The Story of Ethel Smyth. Ontario, Canada: Irwin, 1985.

Collis, Rose. Portraits to the Wall: Historic Lesbian Lives Unveiled. New York: Cassell, 1994.

Jezic, Diane Peacock, and Elizabeth Wood. Women Composers: The Lost Tradition Found. 2nd ed., New York: The Feminist Press at the City University of New York, 1994.

Kertesz, Elizabeth. Issues in the Critical Reception of Ethel Smyth’s Mass and First Four Operas in England and Germany. PhD thesis. Melbourne, Australia: University of Melbourne, 2000.

St. John, Christopher. Ethel Smyth, a Biography. New York: Longmans Green, 1959.

Solie, Ruth A. Musicology and Difference: Gender and Sexuality in Music Scholarship. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995.

Caption

Judy Chicago American, born 1939. Ethel Smyth Place Setting, 1974–1979. Runner: Cotton/linen base fabric, woven interface support material (horsehair, wool, and linen), cotton twill tape, silk, synthetic gold cord, wool, glazed cotton carpet thread, leather covered buttons, metal shanks, suede leather, tape measure, soutache, thread Plate: Porcelain with overglaze enamel (China paint), enamel paint, and gold glaze, Runner: 52 x 30 1/8 in. (132.1 x 76.5 cm) Plate:13 5/8 x 14 3/16 x 4 3/4 in. (34.6 x 36 x 12.1 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Gift of The Elizabeth A. Sackler Foundation, 2002.10-PS-35. © artist or artist's estate

Title

Ethel Smyth Place Setting

Date

1974–1979

Medium

Runner: Cotton/linen base fabric, woven interface support material (horsehair, wool, and linen), cotton twill tape, silk, synthetic gold cord, wool, glazed cotton carpet thread, leather covered buttons, metal shanks, suede leather, tape measure, soutache, thread Plate: Porcelain with overglaze enamel (China paint), enamel paint, and gold glaze

Classification

Sculpture

Dimensions

Runner: 52 x 30 1/8 in. (132.1 x 76.5 cm) Plate:13 5/8 x 14 3/16 x 4 3/4 in. (34.6 x 36 x 12.1 cm)

Credit Line

Gift of The Elizabeth A. Sackler Foundation

Accession Number

2002.10-PS-35

Rights

© artist or artist's estate

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Frequent Art Questions

  • Can you tell me about this place setting?

    This place setting at Judy Chicago's "The Dinner Party" is for Ethel Smyth. Smyth was a composer and the champion for the rights of female musicians in the early 20th century. The place setting is based on a tailored suit, which was the type of clothing Smyth preferred.
    Did Ethel Smyth perform as well? What are some of her famous songs?
    Yes, she did. Her most famous work would be "The March of the Women" in 1922, which was picked up as the anthem for the British women's suffrage movement. Smyth composed a number of operas, such as "The Wreckers" in 1906 and "The Boatswain's Mate" in the early 1910s.
  • Why is there a man's jacket on the placemat?

    The jacket is a reference to Smyth's own style of dress, she preferred a tailored suit. The jacket is shown laid out as if it were in the process of being tailored also making reference to the fact that suit would have to be altered to fit her female figure.
    Thanks.
  • What's the connection between the sewing motif and the piano?

    This place setting represents the composer and women's rights advocate Ethel Smyth. The plate is represents her role as a musician. The stand even features notations from her famous opera "The Boatswain's Mate"
    The runner is made to represent a tweed suit that has been cut open and laid out. It is a direct reference to Smyth's preference for wearing masculine tailored suits, an unconventional choice at the time.
  • What kind of music did she compose?

    Some of her works were Mass in D (1893), The Wreckers (1906), March of the Women (1911), and The Boatswain's Mate (1916).
    The Boatswain's Mate was a popular opera told from a feminine perspective!
  • Why is Ethel Smyth’s plate shaped like a piano?

    Ethel Smyth's plate is shaped like a piano because she was a composer, in addition to a women's rights activist.
    She lived during the early 20th century in Britain, and even wrote songs in honor of the women's suffrage movement!
  • It intrigues me that the lid of the piano becomes a vaginal metaphor. Hmm. I see Clara Schumann is right at the edge of the floor. Is Nannerl Mozart also nearby?

    The names on the floor relate to the place settings they are near so it makes sense to find Schumann, another composer, by the piano-plate of Ethyl Smyth. As for Nannerl Mozart, she is not included.
    I have a background in music so I'm more aware of the possible names that could have been included here. It’s a little like a concentrated archaeological expedition, isn’t it? It makes me sad and angry that so much has NOT been preserved or remembered. Thanks for your answers.
    Yes, as much as the research team behind The Dinner Party uncovered names of artists who didn't get their due recognition, there are still many more who have been left out of history.
  • What is the connection of Smythe with men's tailoring? Not only men's clothing but the tailoring?

    The fact that this suit is shown as if in pieces can be linked to the idea that Smyth, who preferred to wear men's tweed suits, would need to have the garments significantly altered.
    Also, Judy Chicago describes the runner as, "‘taken in’ to fit the confines of the runner’s dimensions, a metaphor for the tragic containment of Smyth’s immense talent."
    Ohhh that's so interesting!
  • What can you tell me about Ethel Smyth?

    Dame Ethel Mary Smyth is famous both as a barrier-breaking female composer and a suffrage activist of the early 20th century. She was born in London, to a military family. She attended the prestigious Leipzig Conservatory, studied under Johannes Brahms and Antonín Dvořák, and soon became a major English composer. She gained popularity in 1893 with her "Mass in D."
    The plate is a piano, referencing Smyth's work as a composer. The stand on the piano includes notation for The Boatswain's Mate, a popular opera written by Smyth in 1916, which, according to Chicago, incorporates a feminist perspective. The three-dimensionality of the plate relates not just to the chronological development of The Dinner Party plates, but also to the way in which, according to Chicago, Smyth pushed boundaries with her career and her sexuality.
  • Why is Ethel Smyth represented by a piano?

    Dame Ethel Mary Smyth is famous as a barrier breaking female composer and a suffrage activist of the early 20th-century.
    She attended the prestigious Leipzig Conservatory, studied under Johannes Brahms and Antonín Dvořák, and soon became a major English composer. That explains the piano!
    And she was a lesbian, apparently!!
    Yes she was. In fact, Smyth was involved romantically with fellow Dinner Party member Virginia Woolf.
    Smyth discusses her attraction to women in her memoirs, and is generally identified as a lesbian, a fact which is incorporated into Chicago's iconography.
  • Who does the piano represent?

    The piano place setting is dedicated to Ethel Smyth. Smyth is famous both as a barrier breaking female composer and a suffrage activist of the early 20th-century.
    She was a major English composer most well known for her piece Mass in D.
    She also wrote March of the Women in support of the Women's Suffrage movement.
    The stand on the piano includes notation for The Boatswain's Mate, a popular opera written by Smyth in 1916, which, according to Chicago, incorporates a feminist perspective.

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