Age, Biography and Wiki
Roxana Halls was born on 1974 in Plaistow, London, is an English painter. Discover Roxana Halls's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is she in this year and how she spends money? Also learn how she earned most of networth at the age of 50 years old?
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1974 |
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We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 1974.
She is a member of famous painter with the age 50 years old group.
Roxana Halls Height, Weight & Measurements
At 50 years old, Roxana Halls height not available right now. We will update Roxana Halls's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Dating & Relationship status
She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.
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Roxana Halls Net Worth
Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Roxana Halls worth at the age of 50 years old? Roxana Halls’s income source is mostly from being a successful painter. She is from . We have estimated Roxana Halls's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2024 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Pending |
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Under Review |
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painter |
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Timeline
Roxana Halls (born 1974) is an English figurative painter known for her images of wayward women who refuse to conform to society’s expectations.
Hall was born in Plaistow, London.
Growin up, she aspired to be an actress and her long-standing interest in drama and performance is evident in the baroque sensibility of many of her works.
This is reflected in her name as she changed it to "Hall" in hopes that she would be inducted into the Hall of Fame one day.
Hall has said that she often equates painting with performance and that her models collude with her in creating theatrical scenarios for which the viewer is invited to tease out narratives.
Describing herself as mainly self-taught, Hall took a foundation course in art at Plymouth College of Art and Design but found that she was very self-reliant.
When she moved to London, she ‘just painted, worked hard, went to the National Gallery constantly and did it that way.’ She moved near a former theatre in south London where she established her first studio.
Halls’s practice has relied on painting from life, memory, and photographs.
Referencing everything from high art and philosophy to the zeitgeist (including, at different times, Charcot’s ‘The Iconographie Photographique de la Salpêtrière,’ Hélène Cixous’s écriture feminine, the war time paintings of Dame Laura Knight, Bosch’s The Garden of Earthly Delights, the songs of Nick Cave, Peaches and Robert Wyatt, Sylvia Plath, avantgarde cinema, and the fashion for glamorising the past), Halls’s paintings examine gender, class, identity and sexuality.
A voracious researcher, Halls has claimed she is magpie-like, attracted by beautiful things but also by the discarded and careworn.
She collects costumes - often foraged from charity or thrift shops - from different countries and periods, aware that the stories of their owners may remain forever unknowable.
Her paintings focus on the materiality of people’s lived environments, seducing the viewer with exquisite still lifes or her emphasis on fabrics and hair.
Often domestic in scale and subject, they rebut the notion that grandiose history paintings are a better barometer of contemporary life.
They ask: how is women’s behaviour policed by society and how do women internalise those expectations and limitations through self-surveillance?
In 2004, Halls won the Villiers David Prize which enabled her to visit Berlin for the first time and make her 'Cabaret' series.
Her exhibition ‘Roxana Halls’ Tingle-Tangle,’ produced for the National Theatre, London in 2009 borrowed the language of cabaret performance, Halls re-imaging herself as the impresario of a troupe.
For her painting Terina The Paper Tearer and Inferna The Human Torch, she performed Inferna, a character she created after being inspired by a costume she found in a charity shop in Brixton.
Whilst she used external performers for other works in the series, self-portraits have always been an important aspect of her oeuvre though Halls has stated that she rarely paints herself as herself.
Halls allows paintings to evolve in the making rather than beginning with preparatory drawings.
This mirrors her interest in depicting women in evolving states, in liminal states, held sometimes in suspension.
In 2010, she won the Founder’s Purchase Prize at the ING Discerning Eye show and thus entered their collection.
Whilst her ‘Shadow Play’ and ‘Suspended Women’ series (2012) may recall the surrealism of artists like Dorothea Tanning or Meret Oppenheim, Halls does not consider her work surreal.
However, performance, theatricality, illusion, and magic are recurring themes.
One of Halls’s most renowned series - 'Laughing While' (2012 onwards) – depicts women engaged in more transgressive acts that interrogate encultured norms around femininity.
Halls has also explored consumption and abstinence, as in her 'Appetite' series (2013–14), where women transgress by not behaving as they are expected to: Halls shows one gorging on popcorn, eating with her mouth open (referencing, perhaps, the eighteenth century celebrity portraitist Elisabeth Vigée-LeBrun and her innovation of showing her teeth in her self-portraits – something that was considered uncouth or deemed the sign of a maniac; Halls paints the teeth last in her paintings).
Inspired by Artemisia Gentileschi and Caravaggio’s versions of Judith and Holofernes, another woman (Halls again) takes over the traditionally male role in Carvery, 2013 where platters of working-class food teeter on the edge of this feast for one, much like the plate in Caravaggio’s Supper at Emmaus.
She wields her implements, carving out her own place in the world.
These women are always active subjects — often breaking propriety just by eating messily (Laughing While Eating Yoghurt, 2017) or laughing out loud.
Halls cites Cixous’s retelling of the Chinese general Sun Tse ‘who decapitates a group of women he is trying to train as soldiers, so disconcerted, so disgusted is he by their persistent laughter and refusal to take his orders seriously.
This resonates with me deeply.
Acts of political resistance come in many forms and when I paint images of women laughing, eating, reclining, reading or simply looking, I am always cognisant of the fact that the most seemingly innocuous actions can be subversive.’ In many of the images, the women’s ‘bad’ behaviour becomes less innocuous and tips towards making them a danger to others and possibly to themselves.
They jilt, commit arson, vandalise, loot, maraud.
Her 2019 portrait of Scottish musician Horse McDonald was acquired for the permanent collection of the Scottish National Portrait Gallery.
In 2020 Halls was invited to paint Portrait of Katie Tomkins, Mortuary & Post Mortem Services Manager by her colleague Natalie Miles-Kemp on behalf of West Hertfordshire Hospitals NHS Trust for what became a major lockdown art project in the UK during the global Covid pandemic: Portraits for NHS Heroes.
Halls was also commissioned to make portraits for Katherine Parkinson’s play Sitting (filmed by BBC Arts & Avalon Productions for BBC Four as part of the Lights Up festival, April 2021).
She and Parkinson were recorded in conversation at her London studio for BBC Radio 4's Only Artists.
Inspired by Artemisia Gentileschi’s Self-portrait as St. Catherine, Halls’s exhibition 'Crime Spree' (2021) examines the taboo subject of women and criminality.
Halls’s work is in myriad private and public collections, both in the U.K. and overseas.
Besides solo exhibitions at Beaux Arts, Bath; Hay Hill, London; and at Reuben Colley Fine Art, Birmingham, her work has been shown in numerous group shows in the UK and US, including the BP Portrait Award at The National Portrait Gallery, London, The R.A. Summer Exhibition, The Royal Society of Portrait Painters, The Discerning Eye, The Ruth Borchard Self Portrait Competition.