758 results on '"Feminism and art"'
Search Results
2. Mostly good and always modern'?: The limits of the modern for women in the 'Home Magazine' in the 1920s
- Author
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Janson, Lucinda
- Published
- 2020
3. Feminism, gender identity and art
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Chen, Ray
- Published
- 2023
4. The history is female: Imelda Cajipe Endaya
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Placino, Portia
- Published
- 2023
5. GROH GOH (Rehearsal for Rangda): Reflections on Bali's witch widow
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Stevens, Leyla and Utomo, Karina
- Published
- 2023
6. Understanding and ending women's homelessness and housing insecurity: The YWCA Australia online course
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Breitkreutz, Grace and Paris, Anna
- Published
- 2023
7. Art and education as a medium to safely explore the impact of gender on women's lived experience of homelessness: A women's homelessness service perspective
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Flynn, Deirdre
- Published
- 2023
8. Contemporary Feminist Art by Women in North Africa : Body Talks
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Ramona Mielusel and Ramona Mielusel
- Subjects
- Art, North African--21st century, Women artists--Africa, North, Women in art, Feminism and art
- Abstract
Contemporary Feminist Art by Women in North Africa: Body Talks dissects the diverse perceptions of the body and how it becomes symbolically charged in the artwork of six contemporary Maghrebi female artists: Majida Khattari, Lalla Essaydi, Zoulikha Bouabdellah, Déborah Benzaquen, Fatima Mazmouz and Zaïnab Fasiki. With a focus on the French, Maghrebi, and North American market and examining artistic mediums ranging from painting and photography to videos and installations, Ramona Mielusel highlights how the body functions as both subject and object of aesthetic discourse. The author denotes these artistic works as the intersection of the intimate and the impersonal, of the individual perception and the communitarian and societal view, without promoting a fixed notion of the body in a specific spatiality and temporality. This book explores the work of female Maghrebi artists and their intentional framing of the body's duality between the symbolic and the real, between cultural interpretation of the body in literature and the actual perception of the body.
- Published
- 2024
9. Gender and Self-Fashioning at the Intersection of Art and Science : Agnes Block, Botany, and Networks in the Dutch 17th Century
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Catherine Powell-Warren and Catherine Powell-Warren
- Subjects
- Feminism and art--Netherlands--History--17th century, Feminism and art, Fashion and art
- Abstract
At once collector, botanist, reader, artist, and patron, Agnes Block is best described as a cultural producer. A member of an influential network in her lifetime, today she remains a largely obscure figure. The socioeconomic and political barriers faced by early modern women, together with a male-dominated tradition in art history, have meant that too few stories of women's roles in the creation, production, and consumption of art have reached us. This book seeks to write Block and her contributions into the art and cultural history of the seventeenth-century Netherlands, highlighting the need for and advantages of a multifaceted approach to research on early modern women. Examining Block's achievements, relationships, and objects reveals a woman who was independent, knowledgeable, self-aware, and not above self-promotion. Though her gender brought few opportunities and many barriers, Agnes Block succeeded in fashioning herself as Flora Batava, a liefhebber at the intersection of art and science.
- Published
- 2024
10. Curating As Feminist Organizing
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Elke Krasny, Lara Perry, Elke Krasny, and Lara Perry
- Subjects
- Feminism and art, Curatorship
- Abstract
What makes curating feminist organizing? How do curators relate to contemporary feminist concerns in their local conditions and the globalized artworld? The book brings together twenty curatorial case studies from diverse regions of the globe.Reflecting their own curatorial projects or analyzing feminist-inspired exhibitions, the authors in this book elaborate feminist curating as that which is inspired to challenge gender politics not only within but also beyond the doors of the museum and gallery. Connecting their wider feminist politics to their curatorial practices, the book provides case studies of curatorial practice that address the legacies of racialized and ethnic violence, including colonialism; which seek to challenges the state's regulation of citizenship and sexuality; and which realize the drive for economic justice in the organizations and roles in which curators work. The settings in which this work is done range from university art galleries to artist-run spaces and educational or activist programmes.This collection will be enjoyed by those studying and researching curating, exhibitions, socially and ecologically engaged contemporary art practices, and feminist transnational movements in diverse geographic contexts. The essays are of relevance to practicing curators, critical cultural practitioners, and artists.
- Published
- 2023
11. Curating with Care
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Elke Krasny, Lara Perry, Elke Krasny, and Lara Perry
- Subjects
- Art museums--Curatorship--Social aspects, Feminism and art
- Abstract
This book presents over 20 authors'reflections on ‘curating care'– and presents a call to give curatorial attention to the primacy of care for all life and for more ‘caring curating'that responds to the social, ecological and political analysis of curatorial caregiving.Social and ecological struggles for a different planetary culture based on care and respect for the dignity of life are reflected in contemporary curatorial practices that explore human and non-human interdependence. The prevalence of themes of care in curating is a response to a dual crisis: the crisis of social and ecological care that characterizes global politics and the professional crisis of curating under the pressures of the increasingly commercialized cultural landscape. Foregrounding that all beings depend on each other for life and survival, this book collects theoretical essays, methodological challenges and case studies from curators working in different global geographies to explore the range of ways in which curatorial labour is rendered as care. Practising curators, activists and theorists situate curatorial labour in the context of today's general care crisis. This volume answers to the call to more fully understand how their transformative work allows for imagining the future of bodily, social and environmental care and the ethics of interdependency differently.
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- 2023
12. Transnational Feminisms and Art’s Transhemispheric Histories : Ecologies and Genealogies
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Marsha Meskimmon and Marsha Meskimmon
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- Feminism and art
- Abstract
In this second book of her trailblazing trilogy, Marsha Meskimmon proposes that decolonial, ecocritical, feminist art's histories can unravel the anthropocentric legacies of Eurocentric universalism, to create transformative conversations between and across many and more-than-human worlds.Engaging with the ecologies and genealogies – worlds and stories – that constitute the plural knowledge projects of transnational feminisms and art's transhemispheric histories, the book is written through two critical figurations: transcanons and trans-scalar ecologies. Materializing art's histories as radical practices of disciplinary disobedience, the volume demonstrates how planetary feminisms can foster interdependent flourishing as they story pluriversal worlds, and world pluriversal stories, with art.This is essential reading for students and researchers in art history, theory and practice, visual culture studies, feminism and gender studies, environmental humanities and cultural geography.The Trilogy: Transnational Feminisms, Transversal Politics and Art: Entanglements and Intersections Transnational Feminisms and Art's Transhemispheric Histories: Ecologies and Genealogies Transnational Feminisms and Posthuman Aesthetics: Resonance and Riffing
- Published
- 2023
13. Visión y diferencia : Feminismo, feminidad e historias del arte
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Griselda Pollock and Griselda Pollock
- Subjects
- Feminism and art
- Abstract
Desde su primera publicación en Inglaterra, Visión y diferencia. Feminismo, feminidad e historias del arte ha sido continuamente citado como un ensayo pionero en la articulación del análisis erudito de obras artísticas con la intensa problematización de esas obras desde una perspectiva teórica marxista y feminista. ¿Por qué el cuerpo femenino desnudo fue el campo de batalla del modernismo? ¿Cuál es el vínculo entre clase social, práctica artística y arte moderno, y qué lugar ocupan las mujeres en esa triangulación? ¿Qué relación existe entre el signo «mujer» y el mito del artista genio? ¿Cómo negocia la práctica artística feminista los significados asociados a ese signo? En estos textos fascinantes, Griselda Pollock ensaya inteligentes respuestas a estas y otras preguntas surgidas de la confrontación de materiales ya transitados por la historia del arte con las herramientas teóricas forjadas por los estudios culturales, el psicoanálisis lacaniano en su reformulación feminista y la obra de Michel Foucault. El lugar de lo moderno en la obra de pintoras impresionistas como Berthe Morisot y Mary Cassatt; la problemática representación de Elizabeth Siddall, modelo y esposa de Dante Gabriel Rossetti, en la bibliografía sobre el prerrafaelismo; los poderes de la representación visual para condensar ansiedades masculinas; las raíces teóricas de la práctica artística feminista británica de la década del ochenta, y la visión como un agente de construcción o subversión de la diferencia sexual son algunos de los temas que la autora aborda en este libro. La vigencia de sus reflexiones sobre la apariencia, la feminidad, el poder de la mirada y la función de las imágenes de mujeres en la sociedad moderna, sin perder de vista su especificidad histórica, social y material, hacen de su lectura un punto de inflexión para la contemplación de obras artísticas. Publicado por primera vez por Routledge en 1988 y reimpreso más de siete veces desde entonces, el libro se traduce por primera vez al español en forma integral en esta edición, acompañado por una introducción original de Laura Malosetti Costa.
- Published
- 2023
14. Encounters in the Virtual Feminist Museum : Time, Space and the Archive
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Griselda Pollock and Griselda Pollock
- Subjects
- Feminism and art, Women in art, Modernism (Art)
- Abstract
Continuing her feminist reconceptualisation of the ways we can experience and study the visual arts, world renowned art historian and cultural analyst, Griselda Pollock proposes a series of new encounters through virtual exhibitions with art made by women over the twentieth century. Challenging the dominant museum models of art and history that have been so exclusive of women's artistic contributions to the twentieth century, the virtual feminist museum stages some of the complex relations between femininity, modernity and representation.Griselda Pollock draws on the models of both Aby Warburg's Mnemosyne Atlas and Freud's private museum of antiquities as well as Ettinger's concept of subjectivity as encounter to propose a differencing journey through time, space and archive. Featuring studies of Canova's Three Graces and women artist's modernist reclamations of the female body, the book traverses the rupture of fascism and the Holocaust and ponders the significance of painting and drawing in their aftermath. Artists featured include: Georgia O'Keeffe, Josephine Baker, Gluck, Charlotte Salomon, Bracha Ettinger and Christine Taylor Patten.
- Published
- 2023
15. Pippi Zornoza
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Ben Fino-Radin, Pippi Zornoza, Ben Fino-Radin, and Pippi Zornoza
- Abstract
A very special episode! Today we are chatting with Pippi Zornoza, co-founder of the Dirt Palace, a feminist artist-run collective/residency program/space that has been a pivotal part of the artistic community in Providence for over 20 years, and this interview is part two of a three part series focused on the Dirt Palace and its two co-founders: Xander Marro and Pippi Zornoza. Pippi’s art and music defy boundaries of media, genre, and context, embodying an intensity and a meticulous approach to detail, often exploring the intricate, macabre, and the obsessive. Pippi’s work spans textiles, embroidery, lace-making, knitting, sculpture, electronics, and performance — be it within an exhibition context, on stage, or in a dark and cavernous warehouse. Pippi’s musical projects are almost too numerous to name: Throne of Blood, Sawzall, Vulture, Bonedust, RETRIX, and currently HARPY., https://www.librarystack.org/pippi-zornoza/?ref=unknown
- Published
- 2024
16. The Pleasures We Choose
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Yvonne Billimore, Jussi Koitela, Pia Lindman, Vidha Saumya, Jenni-Juulia Wallinheimo-Heimonen, Kaisa Sööt, Jos Boys, Mel Y. Chen, Rosalyn D’Mello, Satu Herrala, Jesal Kapadia, Hardeep Mann, Sanni Purhonen, Samuli Saarinen, Anna-Sophie Springer, Lauren Lee, Hanna Väisänen, Elävä Kieli Oy, Yvonne Billimore, Jussi Koitela, Pia Lindman, Vidha Saumya, Jenni-Juulia Wallinheimo-Heimonen, Kaisa Sööt, Jos Boys, Mel Y. Chen, Rosalyn D’Mello, Satu Herrala, Jesal Kapadia, Hardeep Mann, Sanni Purhonen, Samuli Saarinen, Anna-Sophie Springer, Lauren Lee, Hanna Väisänen, and Elävä Kieli Oy
- Abstract
This publication is in close dialogue with the ideas, processes and artworks by Pia Lindman, Vidha Saumya and Jenni-Juulia Wallinheimo-Heimonen, and acts as a handbook to The Pleasures We Choose, the eponymous Pavilion of Finland at the 60th International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia. The contributions gathered here address matters of access, agency, toxicity, architectures of violence (social, cultural and environmental), institutional conditions, disability justice, interdependency, collectivity, human and planetary health, healing, embodiment-as-power, rest-as-resistance, and radical acts of selection, sustaining and spreading pleasure. This book can be read in direct relation to the exhibition, but also functions as an invitation for those who could not attend in person, presenting and extending the core practices, processes and politics of the project through the more intimate and autonomous format of a publication., https://www.librarystack.org/pleasures-we-choose-the/?ref=unknown
- Published
- 2024
17. The Tale and the Tongue: Every Gesture Counts, However Small
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Sonia Fernández Pan, Karolina Grzywnowicz, Elena Zieser, Stephen McEvoy, Emily Harries, Marion Ritzmann, Anna Francke, Colin Barth, Esther Hunziker, Karin Borer, Konrad Sigl, Sonia Fernández Pan, Karolina Grzywnowicz, Elena Zieser, Stephen McEvoy, Emily Harries, Marion Ritzmann, Anna Francke, Colin Barth, Esther Hunziker, Karin Borer, and Konrad Sigl
- Abstract
Every Gesture Counts, However Small is the 20th episode of The Tale and the Tongue series. Full of intimate moments, Sonia Fernández Pan exchanged thoughts over months with artist and activist Karolina Grzywnowicz, talking about plants, migration, activism and much more. “Dear Karolina, The cuttings of the plants you gave me are taking root in water. I put them on a windowsill so that they are closer to the sun. It is quite telling that plants, which apparently don’t move from their place, make you travel so much. But as you say, plants are not as native as they appear to be in many places. How a landscape can be a crime scene and a place full of concealed violence, to borrow your words, reminds me of how the forests of my childhood did not exist in my grandparents’ childhood… This podcast also relates to this moment: a shared need to meet and talk. Especially, when many want us to be silent, detached, and indifferent…. A feminist collective called for the need to talk about trees, connecting many, many feminist struggles around the world. As they say, to talk about trees is to talk about colonialism, extractivism, and injustice… I pause my words here, always curious to hear more stories from you. Take care, and water. Sonia”, https://www.librarystack.org/tale-and-the-tongue-every-gesture-counts-however-small-the/?ref=unknown
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- 2024
18. Revolving Documents: Narrations of Beginnings, Recent Methods and Cross-Mappings of Performance Art
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Sabine Gebhardt Fink, Andrej Mirčev, Andrea Bátorová, Séverine Fromaigeat, Oriana Fox, Stephen Greer, Dror Harari, Cláudia Madeira, Fernando Matos Oliveira, Dorothea Rust, Sandra Sykora, Hanna B. Hölling, Jules Pelta Feldman, Emilie Magnin, Andrea Saemann, Chris Regn, Muda Mathis, Margarit von Büren, Lena Eriksson, Wolfgang Brückle, Rachel Mader, Sabine Gebhardt Fink, Andrej Mirčev, Andrea Bátorová, Séverine Fromaigeat, Oriana Fox, Stephen Greer, Dror Harari, Cláudia Madeira, Fernando Matos Oliveira, Dorothea Rust, Sandra Sykora, Hanna B. Hölling, Jules Pelta Feldman, Emilie Magnin, Andrea Saemann, Chris Regn, Muda Mathis, Margarit von Büren, Lena Eriksson, Wolfgang Brückle, and Rachel Mader
- Abstract
Challenging dominant histories of the genre, this book focuses on translocal and transcultural connections, and seeks to generate, expand knowledge on different narrations of the beginnings of Performance Art. It brings together essays of leading international scholars, curators, and artists who explore the strategies and epistemic/historiographic tools with which museums, galleries, but also historians and theorists and artists, have recollected, reconstructed and represented, this important artistic and activist practice. Written from queer, feminist, and critical perspectives and thus offering multiple methodological frameworks, the publication comes as a result of an intensive dialogue between authors coming from various cultural and academic contexts such as: Switzerland, Slovakia, US, Israel, Germany, former Yugoslavia, UK, and Portgual., https://www.librarystack.org/revolving-documents-narrations-of-beginnings-recent-methods-and-cross-mappings-of-performance-art/?ref=unknown
- Published
- 2024
19. Curating as Governmental Practices: Post-Exhibitionary Practices under Translocal Conditions in Governmental Constellations
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Ronald Kolb, Stephanie Carwin, Biotop 3000, Ronald Kolb, Stephanie Carwin, and Biotop 3000
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This study focuses on the understanding of art as governmental practices. It researches global and postcolonial – translocal & transcultural – contexts of contemporary artistic and curatorial practices, theoretically and through an in-depth analysis of two case studies: Philadelphia Assembled demonstrates the complicated power dynamics within collaborative artistic practices, while documenta fifteen highlights the many complex challenges that the commons approach, and thus more horizontal forms of knowledge production, bring to the art field. Reassessing the curatorial discourse of the “New Museology” since the 1990s (Bennett et al.) and incorporating feminist-influenced critiques of representation (Spivak, Haraway) and the concept of governmentality (Foucault), this dissertation introduces the concept of the “post- exhibitionary complex.” Here, exhibitions become active social spaces and contact zones that promote participatory and direct learning over traditional hierarchical methods. This approach promotes nuanced, networked forms of knowledge production and dissemination grounded in feminist materialism (“Situated Knowledges”). An analytical toolkit is introduced to evaluate exhibitionary projects and their institutional frameworks, focusing on the relationships between art, institutions, and audiences in their governmental and economic contexts. Overall, the study aims to offer an in-depth analysis of the changing landscape of art and curatorial practices in response to global political and economic shifts, highlighting the importance of transversal and post-exhibitionary approaches., https://www.librarystack.org/curating-as-governmental-practices-post-exhibitionary-practices-under-translocal-conditions-in-governmental-constellations/?ref=unknown
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- 2024
20. Weaving Abstraction
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Tobias Ertl, Lucie Kolb, Pablo Müller, Barbara Preisig, Judith Welter, Sabo Day, FLX Labs, Tobias Ertl, Lucie Kolb, Pablo Müller, Barbara Preisig, Judith Welter, Sabo Day, and FLX Labs
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While the historical relationship between textile work and a gendered division of labor has recently gained prominence in art history, the parallels between the loom and the computer have received less attention. In this essay, I discuss Charlotte Johannesson’s solo show Save as Art? at Friart to explore the connections between weaving and coding as well as between radical leftist politics and 1960s–1970s countercultures., https://www.librarystack.org/weaving-abstraction/?ref=unknown
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- 2024
21. The Tale and the Tongue: Getting Along with Discomfort
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Sonia Fernández Pan, Rita Ouédraogo, Elena Zieser, Stephen McEvoy, Emily Harries, Marion Ritzmann, Anna Francke, Colin Barth, Esther Hunziker, Karin Borer, Konrad Sigl, Sonia Fernández Pan, Rita Ouédraogo, Elena Zieser, Stephen McEvoy, Emily Harries, Marion Ritzmann, Anna Francke, Colin Barth, Esther Hunziker, Karin Borer, and Konrad Sigl
- Abstract
Getting Along with Discomfort is episode 21 of The Tale and the Tongue podcast series, which follows a conversation with curator and researcher Rita Ouédraogo on the importance of conversation and exchanges in processes and learning to get along with discomfort. Honesty, something that Rita Ouédraogo brings to this conversation, allows us to know what we can do and where we stand. Many misunderstandings in processes come from not explaining from the start what the conditions and intentions of the projects we work on are. Making them available provides a better understanding of the given structures in which we can work but cannot change. As she says, listening is an essential part of conversation. Discomfort is something that Rita Ouédraogo relates to many of her experiences, from different positions and meanings. Far from being a stable place, discomfort is a situation that arises, that morphs, and that never quite goes away. What is more, for Rita Ouédraogo it can become a curatorial strategy. Acknowledging that discomfort exists, is knowing how to listen to it when it appears., https://www.librarystack.org/tale-and-the-tongue-getting-along-with-discomfort-the/?ref=unknown
- Published
- 2024
22. The Tale and the Tongue: Inhabiting a Tongue Together
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Sonia Fernández Pan, Iz Öztat, Elena Zieser, Stephen McEvoy, Emily Harries, Marion Ritzmann, Anna Francke, Colin Barth, Esther Hunziker, Karin Borer, Konrad Sigl, Sonia Fernández Pan, Iz Öztat, Elena Zieser, Stephen McEvoy, Emily Harries, Marion Ritzmann, Anna Francke, Colin Barth, Esther Hunziker, Karin Borer, and Konrad Sigl
- Abstract
Inhabiting a Tongue Together is episode 22 of The Tale and the Tongue podcast series. It is a conversation between artist Iz Öztat and Sonia Fernández Pan, driven by the curiosity to learn more about Iz and Zişan, Iz’s close collaborator and alter ego, a ghost she encounters from time to time. As I, Sonia Fernández Pan, got to know Zişan better, a sense of time travel came over me. Every episode of her life is a place of struggle, yet also confidence and desire. To follow Zişan brings you to places and times that we have not lived: the Ottoman Empire, the European avant-garde, the memory of the waters of the Danube, the love between women writers in the 1920s… Thanks to Iz Öztat, Zişan makes the past happen differently. The present is a slippery time. It can move us backward and forwards at the same time. The spirit of the Avant-garde of the last century, promoting European modernity, is not so far removed from our present. The relevance of artistic practices is still decided from the same places, even if their actors come from different locations. And it is here that Zişan appears to challenge and be part of an avant-garde that made Europe the centre of attention. When asking Iz Öztat for a different way to introduce Zişan, she would go back to the title of this series. They tell a story inhabiting a tongue together. But this tongue speaks different languages., https://www.librarystack.org/tale-and-the-tongue-inhabiting-a-tongue-together-the/?ref=unknown
- Published
- 2024
23. Xander Marro
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Ben Fino-Radin, Xander Marro, Ben Fino-Radin, and Xander Marro
- Abstract
A very special episode! Today we are chatting with Xander Marro, co-founder of the Dirt Palace, “a feminist cupcake encrusted netherworld located along the dioxin filled banks of the Woonasquatucket river, which is to say in Providence, RI USA.” The Dirt Palace is a feminist artist-run collective/residency program/space that has been a pivotal part of the artistic community in Providence for over 20 years, and this interview is the first in a three part series focused on the Dirt Palace and its two co-founders: Xander Marro and Pippi Zornoza. This series was made in collaboration with Voices in Contemporary Art (VoCA), and was recorded in December 2022 in Xander’s studio. In the interview, we discuss Xander’s creative origins, explorations in puppetry, animation, printmaking, film, live performance, and community arts organizing., https://www.librarystack.org/xander-marro/?ref=unknown
- Published
- 2024
24. Scratching the Surface: Alison Place
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Jarrett Fuller, Alison Place, Jarrett Fuller, and Alison Place
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Alison Place is a designer, educator, and researcher whose work explores the intersection of design and feminist theory. She is the editor of Feminist Designer: On the Personal and the Political in Design and teaches graphic design in the School of Art at the University of Arkansas, where she serves as director of the graphic design program. In this conversation, Jarrett and Alison talk about what feminist design looks like, designers as trouble makers, and rethinking school critiques., https://www.librarystack.org/scratching-the-surface-alison-place/?ref=unknown
- Published
- 2024
25. Chaotic Karachi: Expressions for Sanity
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Ali Gul Pir, Babar Mangi, Sarah Waqar, Shehzad Ghias, Gul Muhammad, Bilal Ali, Rafay Mahmood, Suvani Suri, Hannes Liechti, Karrl, Nana Akosua Hanson, Daniel Jakob, Adi Flück, Centraldubs, Šejma Fere, Kathrin Hadeler, Ali Gul Pir, Babar Mangi, Sarah Waqar, Shehzad Ghias, Gul Muhammad, Bilal Ali, Rafay Mahmood, Suvani Suri, Hannes Liechti, Karrl, Nana Akosua Hanson, Daniel Jakob, Adi Flück, Centraldubs, Šejma Fere, and Kathrin Hadeler
- Abstract
According to the rapper and comedian Ali Gul Pir, Karachi is the most misunderstood place in the world. For TIMEZONES, he produced an episode that will give you a “real” feel of what it’s like to be an artist in this city of a million plus dreams, hopes, and problems. A world leading magazine called Pakistan “the most dangerous place in the world” but take it from Ali Gul Pir, who has lived most of his life there: “It’s an amazing place. Karachi has given me my identity, my voice, and space to express.” In this podcast episode, he meets artists that he’s friends with, to talk about how they use collaborations and work to express themselves, and he also discovers the hurdles of a Pakistani female guitarist., https://www.librarystack.org/chaotic-karachi-expressions-for-sanity/?ref=unknown
- Published
- 2024
26. The Tale and the Tongue: Moving in Migrant Rhythms
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Sonia Fernández Pan, Maya Saravia, Elena Zieser, Stephen McEvoy, Tabea Rothfuchs, Marion Ritzmann, Alice Wilke, Anna Francke, Sarina Scheidegger, Esther Hunziker, Karin Borer, Konrad Sigl, Chris Handberg, Steven Schoch, Sonia Fernández Pan, Maya Saravia, Elena Zieser, Stephen McEvoy, Tabea Rothfuchs, Marion Ritzmann, Alice Wilke, Anna Francke, Sarina Scheidegger, Esther Hunziker, Karin Borer, Konrad Sigl, Chris Handberg, and Steven Schoch
- Abstract
Moving in Migrant Rhythms—episode 19 of The Tale and the Tongue series — follows a conversation with artist and loud thinker Maya Saravia and Sonia Fernández Pan, the host of this podcast series. In their conversation the migrant experience is very present. Maya Saravia has lived in different cities since she left Guatemala, including Madrid, Lisbon, and Berlin. Even if we are the same person, our bodies do not move in the same way in all places and cultures. Part of the insights she and Sonia Fernández Pan share have a lot to do with feeling and thinking with other rhythms. One of the music genres that Maya Saravia often talks about is reggaeton. The reggaeton rhythms are dangerously catchy. It is one of those music rhythms whose will is stronger than ours. In the statement of one of her projects, she refers to raggaeton as a syncretic event. It is a volcano erupting in the world, driven by the flows of capital, labour, many displacements, and musical traditions. El Olvido, another of Maya Saravia’s projects, starts in a bar in Guatemala. She says it’s a bar that could be anywhere in the world. A place where the light-hearted life of bars mixes with the violence of the news. Violence always makes words fall short. Making things happen is usually the attitude of people who see art as a way, and not so much as a destination. It is not about the destination or following a course, but about how one thing leads to another; it is not only important to move, but to create conditions for movement. Perhaps that is the most magical thing about conversations, that they move us without intending to., https://www.librarystack.org/tale-and-the-tongue-moving-in-migrant-rhythms-the/?ref=unknown
- Published
- 2024
27. The Tale and the Tongue: How can a form be a holder for intentions and ideas
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Sonia Fernández Pan, Crystal Z Campbell, Elena Zieser, Stephen McEvoy, Tabea Rothfuchs, Marion Ritzmann, Alice Wilke, Anna Francke, Sarina Scheidegger, Esther Hunziker, Karin Borer, Konrad Sigl, Chris Handberg, Steven Schoch, Sonia Fernández Pan, Crystal Z Campbell, Elena Zieser, Stephen McEvoy, Tabea Rothfuchs, Marion Ritzmann, Alice Wilke, Anna Francke, Sarina Scheidegger, Esther Hunziker, Karin Borer, Konrad Sigl, Chris Handberg, and Steven Schoch
- Abstract
How can a form be a holder for intentions and ideas—episode 18 of The Tale and the Tongue series — follows a conversation with multidisciplinary artist, experimental filmmaker, and writer Crystal Z Campbell. While form is one of the meaning-making elements in art, it can be often overlooked. Crystal Z Campbell, who furthermore refers to attention as a form of care, shaped formal relevance from a question: How can a form be a holder, a vessel, for intentions and ideas? In Crystal Z Campbell’s work, which combines the specifics of historical events with the abstraction of artistic gestures and the serendipity of processes, form can be felt in many ways. Their films are temporary places to enter and engage in a sensory relationship with the stories they make present. The witnessing relationship is also central to their work. Looking is not only a biological process, but also a historical one. They wonder in a public conversation: “How do we look at things we can’t see?” Following their words, “looking should not be easy.” Precisely when things are easy, our attention remains strategically distracted elsewhere, looking without seeing what is in front of us. The conversation with Crystal Z Campbell took place and words in November 2023. They were in Saint Louis, Oklahoma, and Sonia Fernández Pan, the host of this podcast series, was in Berlin. Another thing Crystal Z Campbell mentioned in their conversation: the situation of indirect witness towards so many materials, events, and situations, the acts of omission, the gaps in the narratives. There are still many gaps in the official narratives, but also in our professional stories., https://www.librarystack.org/tale-and-the-tongue-how-can-a-form-be-a-holder-for-intentions-and-ideas-the/?ref=unknown
- Published
- 2024
28. e-flux Index #1
- Author
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George MacBeth, Brian Kuan Wood, Anton Vidokle, Julieta Aranda, Nikolaus Hirsch, Nick Axel, Christina Moushoul, Ben Eastham, Patrick Langley, Francesca Wade, Juliana Halpert, Aaron Schuster, Mike Andrews, Remco van Bladel, Sixing Xu, Jason Read, Peter Sealy, Jacinda S. Tran, Manuel Borja-Villel, Vasif Kortun, Yuriko Furuhata, Xinyue Liu, Boris Groys, Zdenka Badovinac, Christian Nyampeta, Feza Kayungu Ramazani, Iago Bojczuk, Nicole Starosielski, Serubiri Moses, Nkule Mabaso, Pietro Bianchi, Sonia D’Alto, Jennifer Piejko, Sami Khatib, Oxana Timofeeva, Jenny Wu, Sandra Neugärtner, Novuyo Moyo, Matteo Pasquinelli, Jason E. Smith, R. H. Lossin, Nathan Brown, Evan Calder Williams, Christoph Menke, Kim Förster, Stephanie Bailey, Laila Seewang, Aziba Ekio, Michael Kurtz, Dorota Jagoda Michalska, Judith Wilkinson, Kate Sutton, Artemy Magun, Paul Stephens, Tausif Noor, Octavian Esanu, Angela Harutyunyan, Olexii Kuchanskyi, David Morris, Valentin Diaconov, Gracie Hadland, Katherine Adams, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Ikko Kobayashi, Fumi Kashimura, Jose Rosales, Jörg Heiser, Christ Mukenge, Lydia Schellhammer, Sorana Schellhammer, George MacBeth, Brian Kuan Wood, Anton Vidokle, Julieta Aranda, Nikolaus Hirsch, Nick Axel, Christina Moushoul, Ben Eastham, Patrick Langley, Francesca Wade, Juliana Halpert, Aaron Schuster, Mike Andrews, Remco van Bladel, Sixing Xu, Jason Read, Peter Sealy, Jacinda S. Tran, Manuel Borja-Villel, Vasif Kortun, Yuriko Furuhata, Xinyue Liu, Boris Groys, Zdenka Badovinac, Christian Nyampeta, Feza Kayungu Ramazani, Iago Bojczuk, Nicole Starosielski, Serubiri Moses, Nkule Mabaso, Pietro Bianchi, Sonia D’Alto, Jennifer Piejko, Sami Khatib, Oxana Timofeeva, Jenny Wu, Sandra Neugärtner, Novuyo Moyo, Matteo Pasquinelli, Jason E. Smith, R. H. Lossin, Nathan Brown, Evan Calder Williams, Christoph Menke, Kim Förster, Stephanie Bailey, Laila Seewang, Aziba Ekio, Michael Kurtz, Dorota Jagoda Michalska, Judith Wilkinson, Kate Sutton, Artemy Magun, Paul Stephens, Tausif Noor, Octavian Esanu, Angela Harutyunyan, Olexii Kuchanskyi, David Morris, Valentin Diaconov, Gracie Hadland, Katherine Adams, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Ikko Kobayashi, Fumi Kashimura, Jose Rosales, Jörg Heiser, Christ Mukenge, Lydia Schellhammer, and Sorana Schellhammer
- Abstract
e-flux Index is a bimonthly publishing project that synthesizes two months’ worth of contributions from the five separate sections of the e-flux publishing enterprise, from e-flux Architecture, e-flux Criticism, e-flux Education, e-flux journal, and e-flux Notes respectively. Each of these sections has its own independent editorial agenda as well as publishing temporality. This first issue presents the pieces published by e-flux in December 2023 and January 2024. The metadata gives some indication of its breadth, spanning 48 pieces, 52 authors, and over 150,000 words. Following its wider editorial ambitions to co-articulate multiple discourses, the Index removes the identity cards anchoring these pieces to their original provenance, and instead “meta-edits” them into nine emergent thematic strands., https://www.librarystack.org/e-flux-index-1/?ref=unknown
- Published
- 2024
29. Not-Forgetting : Contemporary Art and the Interrogation of Mastery
- Author
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Rosalyn Deutsche and Rosalyn Deutsche
- Subjects
- Art, Modern--20th century, Art and war, Art, Modern--21st century, Psychoanalysis and art, Feminism and art
- Abstract
Explores contemporary art that challenges deadly desires for mastery and dominion. Amid times of emboldened cruelty and perpetual war, Rosalyn Deutsche links contemporary art to three practices that counter the prevailing destructiveness: psychoanalytic feminism, radical democracy, and war resistance. Deutsche considers how art joins these radical practices to challenge desires for mastery and dominion, which are encapsulated in the Eurocentric conception of the human that goes under the name “Man” and is driven by deadly inclinations that Deutsche calls masculinist. The masculinist subject—as an individual or a group—universalizes itself, claims to speak on behalf of humanity, and meets differences with conquest. Analyzing artworks by Christopher D'Arcangelo, Robert Filliou, Hans Haacke, Mary Kelly, Silvia Kolbowski, Barbara Kruger, Louise Lawler, Martha Rosler, James Welling, and Krzysztof Wodiczko, Deutsche illuminates the diverse ways in which they expose, question, and trouble the visual fantasies that express masculinist desire. Undermining the mastering subject, these artworks invite viewers to question the positions they assume in relation to others. Together, the essays in Not-Forgetting, written between 1999 and 2020, argue that this art offers a unique contribution to building a less cruel and violent society.
- Published
- 2022
30. A Time of One's Own : Histories of Feminism in Contemporary Art
- Author
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Catherine Grant and Catherine Grant
- Subjects
- Homosexuality and art, Feminism in art, Feminism and art, Art--Political aspects, Queer theory, Feminist theory
- Abstract
In A Time of One's Own Catherine Grant examines how contemporary feminist artists are turning to broad histories of feminism ranging from political organizing and artworks from the 1970s to queer art and activism in the 1990s. Exploring artworks from 2002 to 2017 by artists including Sharon Hayes, Mary Kelly, Allyson Mitchell, Deirdre Logue, Lubaina Himid, Pauline Boudry, and Renate Lorenz, Grant maps a revival of feminism that takes up the creative and political implications of forging feminist communities across time and space. Grant characterizes these artists'engagement with feminism as a fannish, autodidactic, and collective form of learning from history. This fandom of feminism allows artists to build relationships with previous feminist ideas, artworks, and communities that reject a generational model and embrace aspects of feminism that might be seen as embarrassing, queer, or anachronistic. Accounting for the growing interest in feminist art, politics, and ideas across generations, Grant demonstrates that for many contemporary feminist artists, the present moment can only be understood through an embodied engagement with history in which feminist pasts are reinhabited and reimagined.
- Published
- 2022
31. Women's Work : From Feminine Arts to Feminist Art
- Author
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Ferren Gipson and Ferren Gipson
- Subjects
- Decorative arts--History, Feminism and art, Women artists--Biography
- Abstract
This powerful and insightful work offers a bold celebration of the innovative, brilliant artists reclaiming the idea of ‘women's work'. In the history of western art, decorative and applied arts – including textiles and ceramics – have been separated from the ‘high arts'of painting and sculpture and deemed to be more suitable for women. Artists began to reclaim and redefine these materials and methods, energizing them with expressions of identity and imagination. Women's Work tells the story of this radical change, highlighting some of the modern and contemporary artists who dared to defy this hierarchy and who, through, experimentation and invention, transformed their medium. The work of these women has helped underscore the ongoing value of these art forms within the history of art, championing ‘women's work'as powerful mediums worthy of celebration. With biographical entries on each artist featured, as well as beautiful images of their artworks, Women's Work raises up the work of these visionary and groundbreaking artists, telling their stories and examining their artistic legacies.
- Published
- 2022
32. Dismantling the Patriarchy, Bit by Bit : Art, Feminism, and Digital Technology
- Author
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Judith K. Brodsky and Judith K. Brodsky
- Subjects
- Art and society, Art and technology, Art and computers, Feminism and art, Women artists, Computer art
- Abstract
In Dismantling the Patriarchy, Bit by Bit, Judith K. Brodsky makes a ground-breaking intellectual leap by connecting feminist art theory with the rise of digital art. Technology has commonly been considered the domain of white men but-unrecognized until this book-female artists, including women artists of color, have been innovators in the digital art arena as early as the late 1960s when computers first became available outside of government and university laboratories. Brodsky, an important figure in the feminist art world, looks at various forms of visual art that are quickly becoming the dominant art of the 21st century, examining the work of artists in such media as video (from pioneers Joan Jonas and Adrian Piper to Hannah Black today), websites and social networking (from Vera Frenkel to Ann Hirsch), virtual and augmented reality art (Jenny Holzer to Hyphen-Lab), and art using artificial intelligence. She also documents the work of female-identifying, queer, transgender, and Black and brown artists including Legacy Russell and Micha Cárdenas, who are not only innovators in digital art but also transforming technology itself under the impact of feminist theory. In this radical study, Brodsky argues that their work frees technology from its patriarchal context, illustrating the crucial need to transform all areas of our culture in order to achieve the goals of #MeToo, Black Lives Matter (BLM), and Black and Minority Ethnic (BAME) representation, to empower female-identifying and Black and brown people, and to document their contributions to human history.
- Published
- 2022
33. Contemporary Art and Feminism
- Author
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Jacqueline Millner, Catriona Moore, Jacqueline Millner, and Catriona Moore
- Subjects
- Feminism and art, Art and society--History--20th century, Art and society--History--21st century
- Abstract
This important new book examines contemporary art while foregrounding the key role feminism has played in enabling current modes of artmaking, spectatorship and theoretical discourse.Contemporary Art and Feminism carefully outlines the links between feminist theory and practice of the past four decades of contemporary art and offers a radical re-reading of the contemporary movement. Rather than focus on filling in the gaps of accepted histories by ‘adding'the ‘missing'female, queer, First Nations and women artists of colour, the authors seek to revise broader understandings of contemporary practice by providing case studies contextualised in a robust art historical and theoretical basis. Readers are encouraged to see where art ideas come from and evaluate past and present art strategies. What strategies, materials or tropes are less relevant in today's networked, event-driven art economies? What strategies and themes should we keep hold of, or develop in new ways? This is a significant and innovative intervention that is ideal for students in courses on contemporary art within fine arts, visual studies, history of art, gender studies and queer studies.
- Published
- 2022
34. The Art of Feminism, Revised Edition
- Author
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Helena Reckitt and Helena Reckitt
- Subjects
- Women artists, Women in art, Feminism and art--History, Feminism and art, Feminism in art--History, Feminism in art
- Abstract
Featuring a new package and an additional 60 pages of material, this revised edition of The Art of Feminism covers an even more impressive range of artworks, artists, movements, and perspectives.Since the debut of the original volume in 2018, The Art of Feminism has offered readers an in-depth examination of its subject that is still unparalleled in scope. The comprehensive survey traces the ways in which feminists—from the suffragettes and World War II–era workers through twentieth-century icons like Judy Chicago and Carrie Mae Weems to the contemporary cutting-edge figures Zanele Muholi and Andrea Bowers—have employed visual arts in transmitting their messages. With more than 350 images of art, illustration, photography, and graphic design, this stunning volume showcases the vibrancy of the feminist aesthetic over two centuries. The new, updated edition of the book features revised and expanded material in each of the book's original sections, as well as entirely new material dedicated to the art pieces that have shifted the landscape of feminist art today. This new material includes: women artists of the Bauhaus; grassroots and experimental curatorial efforts; a broader range of performance artists; and recent art shows and works, such as Kara Walker's Fons Americanus, which debuted at London's Tate Modern museum in 2020.UNIQUE IN SCOPE: The breadth and inclusiveness of this volume sets it apart and makes it the definitive book on international feminist art. The new edition brings the book into the current moment, ensuring that this groundbreaking volume remains relevant and fresh. It features an astonishing roster of artists, including:Barbara KrugerSophie CalleMarina AbramovicJudy ChicagoFaith RinggoldCindy ShermanAna MendietaZanele MuholiMickalene ThomasLouise BourgeoisShirin NeshatAndrea BowersPina BauschJEBAmrita Sher-GilLuchita HurtadoAyana JacksonPatrisse CullorsEXPERT AUTHORS: Lead author Helena Reckitt has assembled a team of experts who are superbly qualified to unpack the rich history, power, and symbolism of feminist art for a new modern-day audience.UPDATED AND INCLUSIVE: This edition of the book features an even more diverse array of artists and artworks than the original, from the beautiful figurative paintings of Hungarian-Indian artist Amrita Sher-Gil to the thoroughly researched and extravagantly costumed self-portraits of American photographer Ayana Jackson.Perfect for:Feminists and activistsArt history loversCollege and graduate students
- Published
- 2022
35. Public Feminism in Times of Crisis : From Sappho’s Fragments to Viral Hashtags
- Author
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Leila Easa, Jennifer Stager, Leila Easa, and Jennifer Stager
- Subjects
- Feminism and mass media, Feminism--History, Feminism and literature, Feminism and art
- Abstract
Public Feminism in Times of Crisis examines the public practice of feminism in the age of social media. While their concept of public feminism emerges from a moment of acute crisis (the Trump years and the Covid-19 pandemic), Leila Easa and Jennifer Stager locate its foundations in history, journeying through broad swatches of time looking for connections between the centuries through art and literature and culture. Each chapter focuses on what public feminists do in the world: Public feminists gain control over an archive that otherwise contains or excludes them; they recover their own stories and subjective experiences, sometimes for activist use; they examine images and language that construct women in patriarchal texts; they situate the individual within a collective and the collective within an individual; they confront the limitations of such situating due to the containment of patriarchy and reclaim new systems of power in response; and they resurface a deep history for the alternative strategies of memorializing they employ. In navigating these practices, the authors also attend to the material conditions of writing histories as well as those shaping and enabling public feminist acts and protests more broadly.
- Published
- 2022
36. Maestras antiguas : Mujeres, arte e ideología
- Author
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Griselda Pollock, Rozsika Parker, Griselda Pollock, and Rozsika Parker
- Subjects
- Feminism and art, Women artists
- Abstract
¿Cómo es posible que, a finales del siglo xx, se hubiese borrado de la historia del arte a las mujeres como artistas en tan gran medida como para que la idea de «el artista» fuese exclusivamente masculina? ¿Por qué este borrado fue más radical en el siglo xx que nunca antes? ¿Por qué todo aquello que compromete la grandeza del arte se etiqueta como «femenino»? ¿La crítica feminista de la historiografía artística ha tenido ya algún efecto real, o aún no se ha producido cambio alguno?Este libro, realmente pionero, ofrece un desafío radical a una Historia del arte en la que no abundan las mujeres. La crítica que lasautoras hacen del sexismo en la disciplina conduce a nuevas lecturas ampliadas, inclusivas, del arte del pasado. A lo largo de sus páginas, ponen de manifiesto cómo las cambiantes realidades histórico-sociales de las relaciones de género, así como la transposición que de las condiciones de género hacen las mujeres artistas en sus obras proporcionan claves para comprender bajo una nueva luz por qué y cómo podemos estudiar el arte del pasado. Y van más allá, para mostrar cómo este conocimiento nos permite entender el arte de artistas contemporáneas que son mujeres, contribuyendo así a cambiar el trabajo creativo y la percepción que de sí mismos tienen hoy día los artistas.
- Published
- 2022
37. The art and politicsof artists' personas: The case of Yayoi Kusama
- Author
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Lee, Soojin
- Published
- 2015
38. Transnational Perspectives on Feminism and Art, 1960-1985
- Author
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Jen Kennedy, Trista Mallory, Angelique Szymanek, Jen Kennedy, Trista Mallory, and Angelique Szymanek
- Subjects
- Feminism and art, Art and society--History--20th century
- Abstract
Transnational Perspecives on Feminism and Art, 1960–1985 is a collection of essential essays that bring transnational feminist praxis into conversation with histories of feminist art in the 1960s, 1970s, and early 1980s. The artistic practices and processes examined within these pages all centre on gender and sexual politics as they variously intersect with race, class, sovereignty, Indigeneity, citizenship, and migration at particular historical moments and within specific geopolitical contexts. The book's central premise is that reconsidering this period from transnational feminist perspectives will enable new thinking about the critical commonalities and differences across heterogeneous and geographically dispersed practices that have contributed to the complex and multifaceted relationship between feminism and art today. The book will be of interest to scholars working in art history, cultural studies, visual culture, material culture, and gender studies.
- Published
- 2021
39. Feminist Visual Activism and the Body
- Author
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Basia Sliwinska and Basia Sliwinska
- Subjects
- Feminism and art, Art and social action
- Abstract
This book examines contemporary feminist visual activism(s) through the lens of embodiment(s). The contributors explore how the arts articulate and engage with the current sense of crisis and political concerns (e.g. equality, decolonisation, social justice, democracy, precarity, vulnerability), negotiated with and through the body. Drawing upon the legacy of feminist art historical critique, the book scrutinises activist strategies, practices and resilience techniques in intersectional and transnational frameworks. It interrogates how the arts enable the creation of civil and political resilience, become engaged with politics as a response to disaster capitalism and attempt to reform and improve society. The book will be of interest to scholars working in art history, visual culture, fine arts, women's studies, gender studies, feminism and cultural studies.
- Published
- 2021
40. Iconic Works of Art by Feminists and Gender Activists : Mistress-Pieces
- Author
-
Brenda Schmahmann and Brenda Schmahmann
- Subjects
- Feminism and art, Feminism in art, Masterpiece, Artistic
- Abstract
In this book, contributors identify and explore a range of iconic works –'Mistress-Pieces'– that have been made by feminists and gender activists since the 1970s. The first volume for which the defining of iconic feminist art is the raison d'être, its contributors interpret a'Mistress-Piece'as a work that has proved influential in a particular context because of its distinctiveness and relevance.Reinterpreting iconic art by Alice Neel, Hannah Wilke and Ana Mendieta, the authors also offer important insights about works that may be less well known – those by Natalia LL, Tanja Ostojić, Swoon, Clara Menéres, Diane Victor, Usha Seejarim, Ilse Fusková, Phaptawan Suwannakudt □and Tracey Moffatt, among others. While in some instances revealing cross influences between artists working in different frameworks, the publication simultaneously makes evident how social and political factors specific to particular countries had significant impact on the making and reception of art focused on gender.The book will be of interest to scholars working in art history, visual studies and gender studies.
- Published
- 2021
41. Transnational Feminisms, Transversal Politics and Art : Entanglements and Intersections
- Author
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Marsha Meskimmon and Marsha Meskimmon
- Subjects
- Feminism and art
- Abstract
This book explores the critical significance of the visual arts to transnational feminist thought and activism.This first volume in Marsha Meskimmon's powerful and timely Trilogy focuses on some of the central political challenges of our era, including war, migration, ecological destruction, sexual violence and the return of neo-nationalisms. It argues that transnational feminisms and the arts can play a pivotal role in forging the solidarities and epistemic communities needed to create social, economic and ecological justice on a world scale. Transnational feminisms and the arts provide a vital space for knowing, imagining and inhabiting – earth-wide and otherwise. The chapters in this book each take their lead from a current matter of political significance that is central to transnational feminist activist organizing and has been explored through the arts in ways that permit dialogues across geopolitical borders to take place.Including examples of artwork in full colour, this is essential reading for students and researchers in art history, theory and practice, visual culture studies, feminism and gender studies, political theory and cultural geography.The Transnational Feminisms and the Arts Trilogy: Transnational Feminisms, Transversal Politics and Art: Entanglements and Intersections Transnational Feminisms and Art's Transhemispheric Histories: Ecologies and Genealogies Transnational Feminisms and Posthuman Aesthetics: Resonance and Riffing
- Published
- 2020
42. Matrixial Subjectivity, Aesthetics, Ethics, Volume 1, 1990-2000
- Author
-
Bracha L. Ettinger, Griselda Pollock, Bracha L. Ettinger, and Griselda Pollock
- Subjects
- Aesthetics, Psychoanalysis and art, Feminism and art
- Abstract
This book is the first of two volumes that, together, present for the first time a comprehensive collection of three decades of the theoretical writings of artist and theorist Bracha L Ettinger. Edited and introduced by Griselda Pollock they provide a systematic anthology of Ettinger's path-breaking and influential concept of Matrixial subjectivity-as-encounter and jointness-in-difference, and chart her radical intervention in aesthetics, ethics and theories of subjectivity far beyond classical feminist and current gender/queer theory.This first volume includes the writings in which Ettinger elaborates her original concepts of Matrixial space-time and metramorphosis, fascinance, wit(h)nessing, resonance, transcryptum, com-passion, self-fragilization and resistance, co-emergence and copoiesis transform theories of the subject, Eros, alliance and love, sexual difference, alterity, relationality, trauma and violence. Her critical dialogue with theorists including Levinas, Lacan, Lyotard and Deleuze & Guattari, Butler, Cavarero and Irigaray is evident here.A leading authority on Matrixial theory, Griselda Pollock provides explanatory prefaces to each chapter and a lengthy introduction that situates Ettinger's work in relation to socio-psychoanalytical theory and practice and current social and philosophical debates. Ettinger's interlacing of psychoanalysis, ethics, and aesthetics can be seen here to address some of the deepest challenges of our social, cultural and political existence today.
- Published
- 2020
43. Women, Art, and Society
- Author
-
Whitney Chadwick and Whitney Chadwick
- Subjects
- Women artists--Social conditions, Women artists--History, Feminism and art, Art and society, Women in art
- Abstract
Whitney Chadwicks acclaimed study challenges the assumption that great women artists are exceptions to the rule, who transcended their sex to produce major works of art. While acknowledging the many women whose contribution to visual culture since the Middle Ages have often been neglected, Chadwicks survey amounts to much more than an alternative canon of women artists: it re-examines the works themselves and the ways in which they have been perceived as marginal, often in direct reference to gender. In her discussion of feminism and its influence on such a reappraisal, the author also addresses the closely related issues of ethnicity, class and sexuality. With a new preface and epilogue from an exciting new authority on the history of women artists, this revised edition continues the project of charting the evolution of feminist art history and pedagogy in recent years, revealing how artists have responded to new strategies of feminism for the current moment.
- Published
- 2020
44. Fashionability, Exhibition Culture and Gender Politics : Fair Women
- Author
-
Meaghan Clarke and Meaghan Clarke
- Subjects
- Fair women (Exhibition) (1894 : Grafton Galleries), Feminism and art, Exhibitions--Social aspects
- Abstract
Fair Women was the Victorian equivalent of a ‘blockbuster'exhibition. Organised by a committee of women, it opened to great fanfare in the Grafton Galleries in London, and was comprised of both historical and contemporary portraits of women as well as decorative objects. Meaghan Clarke argues that the exhibition challenged contemporary assumptions about the representation of women and the superficiality of female collectors. The Fair Women phenomenon complicated gender stereotypes and foregrounded women as cultural arbiters. This book uncovers a wide range of texts and images to reveal that Fair Women brought together fashion, modernity and gender politics in new and surprising ways. It shows that, while invariably absent in institutional histories, women were vital to the development of the modern blockbuster exhibition. This book will be of interest to scholars in art and gender studies, museum studies, feminist art history, women artists and art history.
- Published
- 2020
45. UK Feminist Cartoons and Comics : A Critical Survey
- Author
-
Nicola Streeten and Nicola Streeten
- Subjects
- Comic books, strips, etc.--Great Britain--History and criticism, Comic books, strips, etc.--Political aspects--Great Britain, Feminism and art
- Abstract
This book demonstrates that since the 1970s, British feminist cartoons and comics have played an important part in the Women's Movement in Britain. A key component of this has been humour. This aspect of feminist history in Britain has not previously been documented. The book questions why and how British feminists have used humour in comics form to present serious political messages. It also interrogates what the implications have been for the development of feminist cartoons and for the popularisation of feminism in Britain. The work responds to recent North American feminist comics scholarship that concentrates on North American autobiographical comics of trauma by women. This book highlights the relevance of humour and provides a comparative British perspective. The time frame is 1970 to 2019, chosen as representative of a significant historical period for the development of feminist cartoon and comics activity and of feminist theory and practice. Research methods include archival data collection, complemented by interviews with selected cartoonists. Visual and textual analysis of specific examples draws on literature from humour theory, comics studies and feminist theory. Examples are also considered as responses to the economic, social and political contexts in which they were produced.
- Published
- 2020
46. Old Mistresses : Women, Art and Ideology
- Author
-
Rozsika Parker, Griselda Pollock, Rozsika Parker, and Griselda Pollock
- Subjects
- Women in art, Feminism and art, Women artists
- Abstract
Why is everything that compromises greatness in art coded as'feminine'? Has the feminist critique of Art History yet effected real change? With a new preface by Griselda Pollock, this edition of a truly groundbreaking book offers a radical challenge to a women-free Art History. Parker and Pollock's critique of Art History's sexism leads to expanded, inclusive readings of the art of the past. They demonstrate how the changing historical social realities of gender relations and women artists'translation of gendered conditions into their works provide keys to novel understandings of why we might study the art of the past. They go further to show how such knowledge enables us to understand art by contemporary artists who are women and can contribute to the changing self-perception and creative work of artists today.In March 2020 Griselda Pollock was awarded the Holberg Prize in recognition of her outstanding contribution to research and her influence on thinking on gender, ideology, art and visual culture worldwide for over 40 years. Old Mistresses was her first major scholarly publication which has become a classic work of feminist art history.
- Published
- 2020
47. The past is female: A reading of 'Odd Roads' and 'She Persists'
- Author
-
Mayhew, Louise R
- Published
- 2020
48. Women Artists, Feminism and the Moving Image : Contexts and Practices
- Author
-
Lucy Reynolds and Lucy Reynolds
- Subjects
- Feminism and art, Video art, Women artists
- Abstract
What is the significance of gendered identification in relation to artists'moving image? How do women artists grapple with the interlinked narratives of gender discrimination and gender identity in their work? In this groundbreaking book, a diverse range of leading scholars, activists, archivists and artists explore the histories, practices and concerns of women making film and video across the world, from the pioneering German animator Lotte Reiniger, to the influential African American filmmaker Julie Dash and the provocative Scottish contemporary artist Rachel Maclean. Opening with a foreword from the film theorist Laura Mulvey and a poem by the artist film-maker Lis Rhodes, Women Artists, Feminism and the Moving Image traces the legacies of early feminist interventions into the moving image and the ways in which these have been re-configured in the very different context of today. Reflecting and building upon the practices of recuperation that continue to play a vital role in feminist art practice and scholarship, essays discuss topics such as how multiculturalism is linked to experimental and activist film history, the function and nature of the essay film, feminist curatorial practices and much more. This book transports the reader across diverse cultural contexts and geographical contours, addressing complex narratives of subjectivity, representation and labour, while juxtaposing cultures of film, video and visual arts practice often held apart. As the editor, Lucy Reynolds, argues: it is at the point where art, moving image and feminist discourse converge that a rich and dynamic intersection of dialogue and exchange opens up, bringing to attention practices which might fall outside their separate spheres, and offering fresh perspectives and insights on those already established in its histories and canons.
- Published
- 2019
49. Collaborative viewpoints: The writing of impossible descriptions
- Author
-
Schilo, Ann and Sabadini, Anna
- Published
- 2011
50. Performance art collaborations (with notes on video, installation and conceptual art)
- Author
-
Marsh, Anne
- Published
- 2011
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