Autobiography: the drawing series/ feminist interrogations/ sticky water

Here is a link to an art lover's warehouse- http://www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk/blogon/WeeklyOpenings.php 

where I found this information about my work currently at ARC Gallery.

from 04-06-2008 to 28-06-2008

Arc Galleryy, 832 W. Superior St. #204, Chicago, T: (+1) 312 733 2787. 'Feminist Interrogations' showcases feminist art works by emerging artists that do not privilege gender, but see it in conversation with questions of social justice in the global age. Featuring artists from Australia, the United States, and Europe, the artworks selected for the show address how women's lives are impacted by and intersect with a variety of issues, such as consumerism, racism, reproductive rights, domestic violence, and the legacies of colonialism and war. Utilizing strategies that range from self-portraiture to collaborative practice, these artists provide an opportunity to engage in a wider dialogue of these complex concerns, as well as create sites of resistance. Includes work by Theresa A. Anderson, JJ Barrington, Detroit Diamonds Project, Joelle Dietrick & Owen Mundy, Josephine Ferorelli, Kaitlin Kostus, Yvonne Kunz, Kathleen Madigan, Lily Mayfield, Suzanne Kurek Merrell, Kelly Parsell, Nadia Saeed, Satch, Sabba Saleem Syal and Anne Wundrak.

Click to enlarge the image

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Better Homes and Gardens, 2007.

Ink, Watercolor, Collage on Rag Paper.  22 x 30 inches.

As a part of  The Feminist Art Project

Honorary Committee
Norma Broude
American University
E. John Bullard
New Orleans Museum of Art
Connie Butler
Museum of Modern Art
Mary D. Garrard
American University
Chrissie Iles
Whitney Museum of American Art
Arnold Lehman

Brooklyn Museum
Lucy R. Lippard
Writer and activist
Margo Machida
University of Connecticut
Cindy Nemser
Author, critic, journalist
Linda Nochlin
NYU Institute of Fine Arts
Faith Ringgold
Artist, professor emerita UCSD
Lowery Stokes Sims
Museum of Art & Design
Gloria Steinem
Co-founder Ms. Magazine

 

National Committee
Judith K. Brodsky
Judy Chicago
Leslie King-Hammond
Dena Muller
Ferris Olin
Arlene Raven (1944-2006)
Maura Reilly
Susan Fisher Sterling

Founding Program Partners
A.I.R. Gallery
ArtTable
Brodsky Center
College Art Association
Elizabeth A. Sackler Center, Brooklyn Museum
Maryland Institute College of Art
National Museum of Women in the Arts
Institute for Women & Art at Rutgers
Rutgers University & Libraries
Through the Flower
Women's Caucus for Art

For further information contact:
Connie Tell or Nicole Plett

tfap@rci.rutgers.edu

732-932-9407 x46

The Feminist Art Project

Douglass Library - Rutgers University

8 Chapel Drive, New Brunswick, NJ 08901-8527


Our Mission 

The Feminist Art Project is a collaborative national initiative celebrating the Feminist Art Movement and the aesthetic, intellectual and political impact of women on the visual arts, art history, and art practice, past and present. The project is a strategic intervention against the ongoing erasure of women from the cultural record. It promotes diverse feminist art events, education and publications through its website and online calendar and facilitates networking and regional program development throughout the U.S.
_________________________________________________________
Join forces with feminist artists, curators, teachers, and writers nationwide to bring attention to the important achievements of the Feminist Art Movement and current Feminist Art influences, trends and significant accomplishments. Bring widespread visibility to individual women artists and art professionals and work to guarantee the inclusion of women artists in the cultural record of the past, present, and future!

List your events, exhibitions, lectures, artist talks, classes, films and other art related activities on the The Feminist Art Project online calendar.
Find events in your area or to include in your travel plans by searching the The Feminist Art Project
calendar.
Get Involved: If you would like to become involved with Feminist Art Project 
in your area, contact a TFAP Regional Coordinator.
Learn more about TFAP's Feminist Art Education Resources and
websites of interest.

The Feminist Art Project maintains a physical archive of events listed on the TFAP calendar, further insuring the inclusion of feminist art in the cultural record. The Feminist Art Project Archive will be placed in the Miriam Schapiro Archives at Rutgers University. To learn how to participate in the archive...

NEWS


 Anne d’Harnoncourt, 64, Director and CEO of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, died suddenly on June 1, 2008. About Ms. d'Harnoncourt...

 


The National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) announced the appointment of Dr. Susan Fisher Sterling as Director on March 7, 2008. For the full story....

March 28, 2008 - A.I.R.Gallery in NYC and Art and Living Magazine awarded three outstanding women art professionals and three galleries the Art to Life Award for their passion and commitment to advancing the status of women artists. The awardees are: Judith K. Brodsky, Dr. Ferris Olin, Dr. Elizabeth Sackler, ACA Galleries, Flomenhaft Gallery & P.P.O.W. For more information about event go to A.I.R.


 

JuneMAACwalk__fem-3.jpgJuneMAACwalk__fem.jpg JuneMAACwalk__fem-2.jpg


other bloggers comments on the show

http://www.arcviews.blogspot.com/

Sunday, July 6, 2008

A student writes a paper...

...in response to the June exhibitions:

ARC Gallery sponsored an event called Feminist Interrogations, which is a collection of art done by a plethora of artists showing varied experiences (first hand or otherwise) that each artist feels needs attention due to the neglect of society. In conjunction with their show was another event called Vantage Points by Blue Sky Inn. Vantage Points was different mediums of art done by local community centers attendees, either homeless or disadvantaged children. The two shows bought together make a very powerful statement that will leave any viewer shocked by its mix of subtle or blatant messages.

One of the more powerful, albeit subtle, pieces done through the Feminist Interrogations is a black and white photo. Upon first sight, the photo is a female sitting on the side of an old pickup with an even older suitcase planted in front of her feet. Her head is down in her hands. The captioning included with this photo is “Did I do the Right Thing?” The suggestion behind this caption speaks volumes to any woman, but especially those understanding the idea of being ‘stuck’: in a relationship that is neglectful, abusive, dominating, or just plain hopeless. Too many women in this world know what it means to be this woman portrayed in the photo. Here in America, as well as many other societies, relationships are unbalanced with a patriarchal slant. Women are left feeling bereft and fearful because they want to have a better life than where they are but are not sure they can achieve any of that life on their own. They are ‘stuck’ because they worry about financial capabilities, children without father figures, possible homelessness, joblessness, and overall acceptance. The struggle they face is a long, hard road that can be ultimately very lonely. “Did I do the Right Thing?” communicates this message loud and clear in one simple, yet very complex, photo.

The other piece that spoke volumes to this world’s desolation was part of the Vantage Points showing. On first sight, it is nothing more than a piece of pink paper with a child-like handwriting on it. What the child wrote on this paper, however, will make a heart break. In just a few lines, the little girl writes about having been raped. What is heartbreaking is that a viewer will see the handwriting is printed, but the little girl’s signature is showing she has just started to learn cursive writing. This suggests the child is probably in second grade, maybe third. What is wrong with a society that has an 8 year old girl explaining her own rape? As young as she is, she has already had her first glimpse into the undercurrents of a society that projects sex nonstop; she already has to feel the burden of being labeled and unprotected.

Vantage Points’ depictions of homelessness, abuse, and violence for the youth of America and their continual hope by attending these community center’s projects is a perfect partnering and lead-in to Feminist Interrogations’ portrayals of the way life becomes exceedingly difficult for women and minorities as life progresses. All of the pieces in both shows are compelling and powerful. Their messages transcend lines so that anyone can understand and feel what the artist is saying.

Karen Washington
June 7, 2008
DePaul University


 
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