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A New Graphic Novel Tells the Origin Stories of the Superheroes of Feminist Art History—See Images Here
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Time to change Constitution says socially engaged Limerick artist
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Jane Kaufman, artist who celebrated women s work, dies at 83
Jane Kaufman, Embroidered, Beaded Crazy Quilt, 1983-1985, embroidered thread and beads on quilted fabric, 94 × 82 in. (238.76 × 208.28 cm). Courtesy of the artist. Photo by Joshua Nefsky.
by Penelope Green
(NYT NEWS SERVICE)
.- Jane Kaufman was making minimalist paintings in the early 1970s, spraying automobile paint on huge canvases. To be sure, the paint was sparkly, so the canvases shimmered lyrical abstraction was how one reviewer described her art and that of others doing similar work but they were firmly of their reductive minimalist moment. Hilton Kramer of The New York Times approved, giving Kaufman a nod as a new abstractionist in his mostly dismissive review of the Whitney Biennial in 1973.
IF YOU GO …
Where: Schermer Meeting Hall, Anderson Ranch Arts Center
When: Wednesday, 12:30 p.m.
How much: $25
Tickets and more info: andersonranch.org; also streaming online
The Guerrilla Girls have spent the past 36 years fighting the powers that be in the art world, producing inspired public art campaigns to identify sexism and racism in museums and galleries and in wider cultural history.
This masked, anonymous collective who wear gorilla masks and use the names of female artists past has helped change the trajectory of culture with works like “Do women have to be naked to get into the Met. Museum?” their now-iconic 1989 poster that starkly identified that less than 5% all of the artists in the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s modern wing were women but that 85% of its nudes were female. That breakthrough poster identified The Guerrilla Girls as the “conscience of the art world” and they’ve served as such ever since.
/ The Guerrilla Girls will be visiting Anderson Ranch Arts Center as part of the organization s Recognition Week.
The Guerrilla Girls have been calling out sexism and racism in the art world since 1985. They wear gorilla masks to conceal their identities, and their founding members go by the aliases Frida Kahlo and Käthe Kollwitz.
This week, the pair will be at Anderson Ranch Arts Center hosting a workshop and lecture as part of the organization’s Recognition Week. Arts and culture reporter Kirsten Dobroth spoke to Kahlo and Kollwitz ahead of the event.
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