Theodora Esther Cowan was an Australian artist, regarded as the first Australian-born woman sculptor. She was one of a number of women sculptors who were working at the end of the 19th century. Apart from being the first to be born in Australia, Cowan was among the first to achieve success, especially for her portrait work.
Cowan's first commission was completed in Italy. It was "a monument to Miss Pearson, the Red Cross nurse who founded the first private hospital in London" and was erected in the cemetery of San Miniato al Monte. She was invited to submit a maquette for the proposed sculptural groups to be erected on the Queen Victoria Building but her design of "three draped female figures with coat of arms", a work described as "competent if conventional" was not successful, and the commission was given to William Priestly MacIntosh. In 1897 Cowan was a finalist in the inaugural year of the Wynne Prize and again in 1925. After her return to Sydney in 1913, Cowan worked on commissions for various organisations such as the Government of New South Wales, the Chamber of Manufacturers and a small bust of Dr. Hinder for the Western Suburbs Hospital. In Sydney, she was a regular exhibitor at the Society of Artists for which organisation she was a Council member from 1897–98, and an active member of the Society of Women Painters. She became interested in watercolour painting and in later life "turned increasingly towards painting and away from sculpture".
Works
Cowan completed a number of portrait busts of notable people, including the one which took pride of place in her one-woman exhibition at London's Grafton Galleries, that of the Bishop of London, Arthur Winnington-Ingram. The Bishop reportedly sat for it at Fulham Palace. Other well-known, notable subjects included Sir Gilbert Parker, Sir Edmund Barton, Sir Henry Parkes, and a full length statuette of Mrs. Brown-Potter. Her work is represented in the collections of the Art Gallery of New South Wales and the Parliament House, Canberra. The bust of Eccleston du Faur was the Gallery's first commission to a Sydney artist. "After the completion of the Eccleston du Faur marble bust, there were questions in Parliament as to why the bust had been commissioned and why the commission had been given to a woman." Her portrait bust of Eliezer Levi Montefiore has been assessed as clearly showing her "skill as a portraitist". It was sculpted in 1898. In 1902 in London she was given a commission for a bust in marble of EgyptologistFlinders Petrie, who was the grandson of explorer Matthew Flinders.
Awards
1899 – Society of Artists' Spring Exhibition
In 1900, she was in London where she held a successful solo exhibition at the Grafton Gallery