ahtr feminism & art

15
Feminism & Art 1960s – the present

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A slideshow connected to a lecture of Feminism & Art available at Art History Teaching Resources (http://arthistoryteachingresources.org/), written by Saisha Grayson-Knoth.

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Page 1: AHTR Feminism & Art

Feminism & Art1960s – the present

Page 2: AHTR Feminism & Art

Feminist Art: 1960s – the present

but also

The Feminist Critique of Art: The beginning of human history –

1960s

Page 3: AHTR Feminism & Art

Prehistoric Wall Painting (Line Drawing)

Page 4: AHTR Feminism & Art

The intersection of Feminism and Art produces many interesting effects, disrupting the story of Modernist Art and its smooth transitions from one “important” style to the next.

Feminist Art can be a way of categorizing art made by (mostly) women that consciously links its strategies and goals to those of the Women’s Rights Movement of the late 1960s and 70s, and to feminist ideas and politics ever since.

Feminist challenges to the art world and its institutional bias also made space for women (and other artists interested in working against the grain) to make and show art of all kinds, whether feminist or not, in ways that they hadn’t been able to before.

Perhaps most importantly, Feminism continually serves as a critical lens for considering all cultural production, including conceptual categories like Art, Women, and Importance, in relation to gender and power.

Page 5: AHTR Feminism & Art

Jackson Pollock at work in his studio, 1950. Photograph by Hans Namuth.(source)

Carolee Schneeman, Eye Body: 36 Transformative Actions, 1963,Paint, glue, fur, feathers, garden snakes, glass, and plastic with the studio installation "Big Boards.” Photograph by Erró. (source)

Page 6: AHTR Feminism & Art

Carolee Schneeman, Interior Scroll, 1977, Performance. (source)

“…He said we are fond of youYou are charmingBut don't ask us to lookAt your filmsWe cannot look at:the personal clutterthe persistence of feelingthe hand-touch sensibilitythe diaristic indulgencethe painterly messthe dense gestalt…he said we can be friends equally though we are not artistsequally I said we cannot be friends equally and we cannot be artists equally…He told me he lived with A ‘sculptress’ I asked doesThat make me a ‘film-makeress’

‘Oh no,’ he said. ‘We think of youAs a dancer.’ ”

- Excerpt from Interior Scroll

Page 7: AHTR Feminism & Art

Yoko Ono, Cut Piece, 1964, Performance. (source)

Vito Acconci, Following Piece, 1969, Performance. (source).

Page 8: AHTR Feminism & Art

Adrian Piper, Mythic Being: Cruising White Women #1 of 3, 1975, Photograph of performance. (source)

Adrian Piper, My Calling Card #1, 1986, Lithograph.(source)

Page 9: AHTR Feminism & Art

Martha Rosler, Bringing the War Home: House Beautiful (Giacometti),1967–72, Photomontage. (source)

Martha Rosler, Body Beautiful or Beauty Knows No Pain (Cargo Cult), 1967–72, Photomontage. (source)

Page 10: AHTR Feminism & Art

Judy Chicago, The Dinner Party, 1974–79, Ceramic, porcelain, and textile.(source)

Page 11: AHTR Feminism & Art

Cindy Sherman, Untitled Film Stills #7 (left) and #21 (right), 1978, Black and white photographs.

Page 12: AHTR Feminism & Art

Barbara Kruger, Untitled (We Won’t Play Nature to Your Culture), 1983, (left), and Untitled (We Don’t Need Another Hero), 1987, (right), Photostats.

Page 13: AHTR Feminism & Art

Coco Fusco and Guillermo Gomez-Peña, The Year of the White Bear and Two Undiscovered Amerindians visit the West, 1992–1994, Performance at museums. (source)

Page 14: AHTR Feminism & Art

Kara Walker, Gone, An Historical Romance of a Civil War as it Occurred between the Dusky Thighs of One Young Negress and Her Heart [detail], 1994, Cut paper on wall. (source)

Page 15: AHTR Feminism & Art

Mickalene Thomas, Le déjeuner sur l’herbe: Les Trois Femmes Noires, 2010, Rhinestones, acrylic, and enamel on wood panel. (source)

Édouard Manet (1832–1883), Le déjeuner sur l’herbe (Lunch on the Grass), 1863, Oil on canvas. (source)