Part of her literary output is known to be unpublished or scattered in newspapers and magazines – as is also the case with other feminist writers of the era such as her mother and sister, María Luisa Fernández, and Sara Hübner de Fresno.[4] Her literary work is considered to be part of the early 20th century avant-garde that sought to massify feminist thinking and fight for women's rights.[10]
The spiritism sessions that she held with her sister Carmen in the early 20th century have inspired plays and novels.[12][13][14] In Grupo 7, – the Morlas' esoteric circle to which painter María Tupper (1893–1965) also belonged – Ximena was the main medium, although her sister Carmen also functioned as such. Her astral name was Vera, her sister's was Nakinko, her mother's was Asiul, and Tupper's was Cirineo.[15]
As a painter, she made portraits in oil on canvas. She was also an "illustrator and creator of imaginative compositions of native style."[3]
1915: Exposición Anual de Bellas Artes, Salón Oficial, Santiago
1927: Exposición de Bellas Artes, Salón Oficial, Santiago
1936: Exposición Nacional de Artes Plásticas de Valparaíso
1963: Salón Oficial de Artes Plásticas, Santiago
1975: La Mujer en el Arte, Museo Nacional de Bellas artes, Santiago
References
^de la Cuadra Gormaz, Guillermo (1982). Familias chilenas: (origen y desarrollo de las familias chilenas) [Chilean Families: (Origin and Growth of Chilean Families)] (in Spanish). Santiago: Editorial Zamorano y Caperán. p. 526. Retrieved 29 September 2017 – via Google Books.
^Las Morla. Diarios y dibujos de Carmen y Ximena Morla [The Morlas. Journals and Drawings by Carmen and Ximena Morla] (in Spanish). Pontifical Catholic University of Chile. 2016.
^ abSubercaseaux, Bernardo (1 January 1997). Genealogía de la vanguardia en Chile [Genealogy of the Avant-Garde in Chile] (in Spanish). University of Chile Faculty of Philosophy and Humanities. p. 57.
^de La Goublaye, Yves; Schuler Dauvin, Santiago (2004). "Descendencia del general de la Real Armada española don Pedro Pérez de la Quintana en Chile, Perú y Bolivia (1600–2004)" [Descent of the General of the Royal Spanish Armada Don Pedro Pérez de la Quintana in Chile, Peru and Bolivia (1600–2004)]. Revista de estudios históricos (in Spanish). 45. Chilean Institute of Genealogical Research: 19–118.
^Cabello, Marcello (28 February 2001). "La esoteria de las hermanas Morla" [The Esotericism of the Morla Sisters]. EMOL (in Spanish). Retrieved 29 September 2017.