This Article is From Jul 03, 2016

Oxford Varsity Commissions New Portraits To Counter Male Image

Oxford Varsity Commissions New Portraits To Counter Male Image

Oxford University's first phase of its "Diversifying Portraiture" project was launched in 2014.

London: Seeking to counter its image as having a male bias, Oxford University has commissioned artists to paint dozens of new portraits of living figures connected to the prestigious institutuion representing diversity in gender, race, disability and LGBTQ.

The portraits will cost 900 pounds each and comes along with a sticker campaign with the words "next in the frame" around the world famous university asking staff and students to nominate suitable subjects by the end of this week.

In addition, colleges are re-decorating dining and lecture halls with new pictures and photographs, including a portrait of the first female Anglican bishop, Libby Lane, 'The Sunday Times' reported.

The university said the first phase of its "Diversifying Portraiture" project, launched in 2014, involved collecting 250 existing portraits of people who had "challenged the stereotypes and preconceptions of their times" and putting them online.

It was now looking for suggestions for "fresh portraits of living figures connected to Oxford representing our diversity in gender, race, disability and LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transsexual and queer) identity".

Stephen Goss, Oxford's pro-vice-chancellor for personnel and equality, said these would be "displayed prominently at sites right across the university, reflecting the remarkable contributions made by so many individuals to modern Oxford's culture of inclusion, equality and tolerance".

"In my college, New College, there are portraits of men everywhere. While pictures are not the same as gender or race equality, I do not think this is trivial. If all you see are white men, white men, white men, it is very hard to believe that people in your society think you have a place in history. Changing iconography helps to change how you see history," feminist and author Naomi Wolf, who left Oxford in the 1980s, told the newspaper.

Her portrait is among the new set and will go up Rhodes House, the home of the Rhodes Scholarship scheme that pays for non-British post-graduate students to study at Oxford.
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