2006: Jacqueline Fahey

Jacqueline Fahey was one of the first New Zealand artists to paint from a woman's perspective, illustrating "the theatricality of domestic life" and, in the 1950s, the crippling isolation of women in the suburban family home. Fahey tells Kim Hill she's always been a rebel. The painter is also a writer of two memoirs and two novels. She lost belief in God aged eight when the nuns at her boarding school said that her pet dogs hadn't gone to heaven. Fahey described herself as not a lapsed but a 'fallen over' Catholic.Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

Om Podcasten

For more than 30 years, Kim Hill has set the gold standard. In this collection, we delve into the archives to bring you a selection of Kim Hill's best interviews.