Esther Gwendolyn Bowen, who was known as Stella, was born on 16 May 1893 in
North Adelaide, an inner suburb of
Adelaide, South Australia, and educated at
Tormore House School. As a young girl, Bowen enjoyed drawing and convinced her mother to allow her to study with
Margaret Preston. However, her desire to pursue art training in Melbourne was thwarted by the ill health of her mother and the latter's reluctance to let her daughter follow such a career. When her mother died in 1914, Bowen left for England with a return ticket and an allowance of £20 per month. In London, she studied at the
Westminster School of Art and mixed with a company of writers, artists, poets and political activists, including
T.S. Eliot,
Wyndham Lewis,
Violet Hunt, and
William Butler Yeats. Early in 1918, Bowen met and fell in love with the writer
Ford Madox Ford. She was 24, he was 44. The couple fled to rural England where their daughter Julie was born in 1920. However, by 1922, the family were fed up with the hardships of life in the English countryside and moved temporarily to France. They soon decided to remain in France and moved to Paris. Caught up in the bohemian café society of Paris, Ford started a literary magazine and was a leading figure among the expatriate writers. Bowen, meanwhile, found her first studio but managed little time for painting in between attending to the needs of Ford and their daughter. ==Later years==